AbstractHuman language is massively ambiguous, yet we are generally able to identify the intended meanings of the sentences we hear and read quickly and accurately. How we manage and resolve ambiguity incrementally during real-time language comprehension given our cognitive resources and constraints is a major question in human cognition. Previous research investigating resource constraints on lexical ambiguity resolution has yielded conflicting results. Here we present results from two experiments in which we recorded eye movements to test for evidence of resource constraints during lexical ambiguity resolution. We embedded moderately biased homographs in sentences with neutral prior context and either long or short regions of text before ...
Competing models of eye movement control during reading disagree over the extent to which eye moveme...
In two experiments, we explored the degree to which sentence context effects operate at a lexical or...
Item does not contain fulltextWe present an event-related brain potential (ERP) study demonstrating ...
Syntactically ambiguous sentences offer an insight into how sentences generally are processed, by ex...
This study explores how contextual information interacts in discourse representation when a biased a...
Recent debates on lexical ambiguity resolution have centered on the subordinate-bias effect, in whic...
Subjects read sentences containing lexically ambiguous words while their eye movements were monitore...
We present two sets of event-related potential (ERP) data on separate aspects of sentence processing...
Abstract An experimental study dedicated to structurally ambiguous sentences processing was carried ...
In this dissertation, I took advantage of a very common phenomenon, lexical ambiguity, to address th...
This study investigates the role of specific inhibitory processes in lexical ambiguity resolution. A...
Effects of context are pervasive throughout perceptual and cognitive processing domains. Many studie...
A growing number of researchers in the sentence processing community are using eye movements to addr...
Two eye movement studies with novel lexicons investigate how and when affordance-based semantic cons...
The processes by which spoken language is comprehended are extremely complex, and the development of...
Competing models of eye movement control during reading disagree over the extent to which eye moveme...
In two experiments, we explored the degree to which sentence context effects operate at a lexical or...
Item does not contain fulltextWe present an event-related brain potential (ERP) study demonstrating ...
Syntactically ambiguous sentences offer an insight into how sentences generally are processed, by ex...
This study explores how contextual information interacts in discourse representation when a biased a...
Recent debates on lexical ambiguity resolution have centered on the subordinate-bias effect, in whic...
Subjects read sentences containing lexically ambiguous words while their eye movements were monitore...
We present two sets of event-related potential (ERP) data on separate aspects of sentence processing...
Abstract An experimental study dedicated to structurally ambiguous sentences processing was carried ...
In this dissertation, I took advantage of a very common phenomenon, lexical ambiguity, to address th...
This study investigates the role of specific inhibitory processes in lexical ambiguity resolution. A...
Effects of context are pervasive throughout perceptual and cognitive processing domains. Many studie...
A growing number of researchers in the sentence processing community are using eye movements to addr...
Two eye movement studies with novel lexicons investigate how and when affordance-based semantic cons...
The processes by which spoken language is comprehended are extremely complex, and the development of...
Competing models of eye movement control during reading disagree over the extent to which eye moveme...
In two experiments, we explored the degree to which sentence context effects operate at a lexical or...
Item does not contain fulltextWe present an event-related brain potential (ERP) study demonstrating ...