Existing work shows that readers often interpret grammatical errors (e.g., The key to the cabinets *were shiny) and sentence-level blends (“without-blend”: Claudia left without her headphones *off) in a non-literal fashion, inferring that a more frequent or more canonical utterance was intended instead. This work examines how interlocutor identity affects the processing and interpretation of anomalous sentences. We presented anomalies in the context of “emails” attributed to various writers in a self-paced reading paradigm and used comprehension questions to probe how sentence interpretation changed based upon properties of the item and properties of the “speaker.” Experiment 1 compared standardised American English speakers to L2 English s...
Speakers sometimes encounter utterances that have anomalous linguistic features. Are such features r...
Everyday speech is rife with errors and disfluencies, yet processing what we hear usually feels effo...
With event-related potentials we examined how speaker identity affects the processing of speech erro...
Existing work shows that readers often interpret grammatical errors (e.g., The key to the cabinets *...
How do native listeners process grammatical errors that are frequent in non-native speech? We invest...
With event-related potentials we examined how speaker identity affects the processing of speech erro...
This article was supported by the Open Access Publication Fund of Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin.Wit...
We frequently experience and successfully process anomalous utterances. Here we examine whether peop...
Research on temporarily ambiguous “garden path” sentences (e.g., After Mary dressed the baby laughed...
We frequently experience and successfully process anomalous utterances. Here we examine whether peop...
In this study, the influence of plausibility information on the real-time processing of locally ambi...
We are so used to speaking in our native language that we take this ability for granted. We think th...
We are so used to speaking in our native language that we take this ability for granted. We think th...
We are so used to speaking in our native language that we take this ability for granted. We think th...
We are so used to speaking in our native language that we take this ability for granted. We think th...
Speakers sometimes encounter utterances that have anomalous linguistic features. Are such features r...
Everyday speech is rife with errors and disfluencies, yet processing what we hear usually feels effo...
With event-related potentials we examined how speaker identity affects the processing of speech erro...
Existing work shows that readers often interpret grammatical errors (e.g., The key to the cabinets *...
How do native listeners process grammatical errors that are frequent in non-native speech? We invest...
With event-related potentials we examined how speaker identity affects the processing of speech erro...
This article was supported by the Open Access Publication Fund of Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin.Wit...
We frequently experience and successfully process anomalous utterances. Here we examine whether peop...
Research on temporarily ambiguous “garden path” sentences (e.g., After Mary dressed the baby laughed...
We frequently experience and successfully process anomalous utterances. Here we examine whether peop...
In this study, the influence of plausibility information on the real-time processing of locally ambi...
We are so used to speaking in our native language that we take this ability for granted. We think th...
We are so used to speaking in our native language that we take this ability for granted. We think th...
We are so used to speaking in our native language that we take this ability for granted. We think th...
We are so used to speaking in our native language that we take this ability for granted. We think th...
Speakers sometimes encounter utterances that have anomalous linguistic features. Are such features r...
Everyday speech is rife with errors and disfluencies, yet processing what we hear usually feels effo...
With event-related potentials we examined how speaker identity affects the processing of speech erro...