We show that language users readily learn the probabilities of novel lexical cues to syntactic information (verbs biasing towards a prepositional object dative vs. double-object dative and words biasing towards a verb vs. noun reading) and use these biases in a subsequent production task. In a one-hour exposure phase participants read 12 novel lexical items, embedded in 30 sentence contexts each, in their native language. The items were either strongly (100%) biased towards one grammatical frame or syntactic category assignment or unbiased (50%). The next day participants produced sentences with the newly learned lexical items. They were given the sentence beginning up to the novel lexical item. Their output showed that they were highly sen...
Adult knowledge of a language involves correctly balancing lexically-based and more language-general...
Children must learn the structural biases of locative verbs in order to avoid making overgeneralisat...
It has long been assumed that people learn much of their vocabulary incidentally during the course o...
Verb-specific preference for syntactic structure (verb bias) is considered as a critical parsing con...
A verb bias refers to a higher likelihood for a verb to appear in one particular sentence structure....
During language processing we use available information to facilitate the processing of incoming inf...
How do speakers choose between structural options for expressing a given meaning? Overall preference...
Verb bias facilitates parsing of temporarily ambiguous sentences, but it is unclear when and how com...
Three experiments examined the involvement of newly learnt words in lexical competition. Adult parti...
Successful language learning combines generalization and the acquisition of lexical constraints. Th...
In some theories of sentence comprehension, linguistically relevant lexical knowledge, such as selec...
During incremental language understanding, comprehenders draw on a rich base of probabilistic cues t...
In some theories of sentence comprehension, linguistically relevant lexical knowledge, such as selec...
Acquiring novel verb meanings is challenging because events in the world are inherently multi-interp...
Three experiments examined the roles of time and exposure frequency in lexicalization of novel word...
Adult knowledge of a language involves correctly balancing lexically-based and more language-general...
Children must learn the structural biases of locative verbs in order to avoid making overgeneralisat...
It has long been assumed that people learn much of their vocabulary incidentally during the course o...
Verb-specific preference for syntactic structure (verb bias) is considered as a critical parsing con...
A verb bias refers to a higher likelihood for a verb to appear in one particular sentence structure....
During language processing we use available information to facilitate the processing of incoming inf...
How do speakers choose between structural options for expressing a given meaning? Overall preference...
Verb bias facilitates parsing of temporarily ambiguous sentences, but it is unclear when and how com...
Three experiments examined the involvement of newly learnt words in lexical competition. Adult parti...
Successful language learning combines generalization and the acquisition of lexical constraints. Th...
In some theories of sentence comprehension, linguistically relevant lexical knowledge, such as selec...
During incremental language understanding, comprehenders draw on a rich base of probabilistic cues t...
In some theories of sentence comprehension, linguistically relevant lexical knowledge, such as selec...
Acquiring novel verb meanings is challenging because events in the world are inherently multi-interp...
Three experiments examined the roles of time and exposure frequency in lexicalization of novel word...
Adult knowledge of a language involves correctly balancing lexically-based and more language-general...
Children must learn the structural biases of locative verbs in order to avoid making overgeneralisat...
It has long been assumed that people learn much of their vocabulary incidentally during the course o...