A high prevalence of syntactic gradience is well attested, but a comprehensive explanation is still needed. In the present paper, we look into the question of whether semantic influences could account for parts of the observed gradience. Results from two experiments suggest that semantic influences can have a degrading effect on the acceptability of grammatical items. However, we did not observe that they had an ameliorating effect, which still leaves a good deal of the observed gradience in need of an explanation
International audienceWe propose in this paper a method for quantifying sentence grammaticality. The...
This chapter addresses how linguists’ empirical (syntactic) claims should be tested with non-linguis...
The argument that I tried to elaborate on in this paper is that the conceptual problem behind the tr...
A high prevalence of syntactic gradience is well attested, but a comprehensive explanation is still ...
The present study investigates the interaction between syntax and semantics, and its effects on acce...
Häussler J, Juzek TS. Linguistic intuitions and the puzzle of gradience. In: Schindler S, Drożdżowi...
How well can people identify semantic incongruities, which are often used in linguistic research and...
Linguistic theory is built on an empirical foundation consisting largely of sentence acceptability j...
abstractLinguistic acceptability judgments are widely agreed to reflect constraints on real-time lan...
(to appear in Studies in Computational Intelligence, Springer)International audienceThe traditional ...
Syntactic satiation is a phenomenon in which certain ungrammatical structures increase in acceptabil...
It is well-known that the acceptability judgments at the core of current syntactic theories are cont...
Acceptability judgments are the primary source of data for linguistic theory, based on the assumptio...
As linguistic theory becomes more refined, linguists increasingly rely on subtle judgments about sl...
Judgments about the grammaticality/acceptability of sentences are the most widely used data source i...
International audienceWe propose in this paper a method for quantifying sentence grammaticality. The...
This chapter addresses how linguists’ empirical (syntactic) claims should be tested with non-linguis...
The argument that I tried to elaborate on in this paper is that the conceptual problem behind the tr...
A high prevalence of syntactic gradience is well attested, but a comprehensive explanation is still ...
The present study investigates the interaction between syntax and semantics, and its effects on acce...
Häussler J, Juzek TS. Linguistic intuitions and the puzzle of gradience. In: Schindler S, Drożdżowi...
How well can people identify semantic incongruities, which are often used in linguistic research and...
Linguistic theory is built on an empirical foundation consisting largely of sentence acceptability j...
abstractLinguistic acceptability judgments are widely agreed to reflect constraints on real-time lan...
(to appear in Studies in Computational Intelligence, Springer)International audienceThe traditional ...
Syntactic satiation is a phenomenon in which certain ungrammatical structures increase in acceptabil...
It is well-known that the acceptability judgments at the core of current syntactic theories are cont...
Acceptability judgments are the primary source of data for linguistic theory, based on the assumptio...
As linguistic theory becomes more refined, linguists increasingly rely on subtle judgments about sl...
Judgments about the grammaticality/acceptability of sentences are the most widely used data source i...
International audienceWe propose in this paper a method for quantifying sentence grammaticality. The...
This chapter addresses how linguists’ empirical (syntactic) claims should be tested with non-linguis...
The argument that I tried to elaborate on in this paper is that the conceptual problem behind the tr...