We contrasted two hypotheses concerning how speakers determine adjective order during referential communication. The discriminatory efficiency hypotheses claims that speakers place the most discriminating adjective early to facilitate referent identification. By contrast, the availability-based ordering hypothesis assumes that speakers produce most available adjectives early to ease production. Experiment 1 showed that speakers use more pattern-before-color modifier orders (than the reversed) when pattern, not color, distinguished the referent from alternatives, providing support for the discriminatory efficiency hypothesis. Participants also overspecified color more often than pattern, and they generally favored color-before-pattern orders...
In expressing rich, multi-dimensional thought in language, speakers are influenced by a range of fac...
When referring to objects, speakers are often more specific than necessary for the purpose of establ...
It has recently been claimed that the canonical word order of a given language constrains phonologic...
We contrasted two hypotheses concerning how speakers determine adjective order during referential co...
From English to Hungarian to Mokilese, speakers exhibit strong ordering preferences in multi-adjecti...
When referring to an object using a description, speak- ers need to select properties which jointly...
Abstract A psychophysical analysis of referential communication establishes a causal link between a ...
The problem undertaken here is to account for the relational placement in English of words tradition...
Why do languages look the way they do? This question lies at the core of much of linguistics resear...
A pragmatic account of referential communication is developed which presents an alternative to tradi...
When referring to an object using a description, speakers need to select properties which jointly di...
When referring to an object using a description, speak-ers need to select properties which jointly d...
International audienceWord-order rules impose major constraints on linguistic behavior. For example,...
Background - Linguists and psychologists have explained the remarkable similarities in the orderings...
I argue there are four classes of adjectives relevant to syntactic ordering: predicative/intersectiv...
In expressing rich, multi-dimensional thought in language, speakers are influenced by a range of fac...
When referring to objects, speakers are often more specific than necessary for the purpose of establ...
It has recently been claimed that the canonical word order of a given language constrains phonologic...
We contrasted two hypotheses concerning how speakers determine adjective order during referential co...
From English to Hungarian to Mokilese, speakers exhibit strong ordering preferences in multi-adjecti...
When referring to an object using a description, speak- ers need to select properties which jointly...
Abstract A psychophysical analysis of referential communication establishes a causal link between a ...
The problem undertaken here is to account for the relational placement in English of words tradition...
Why do languages look the way they do? This question lies at the core of much of linguistics resear...
A pragmatic account of referential communication is developed which presents an alternative to tradi...
When referring to an object using a description, speakers need to select properties which jointly di...
When referring to an object using a description, speak-ers need to select properties which jointly d...
International audienceWord-order rules impose major constraints on linguistic behavior. For example,...
Background - Linguists and psychologists have explained the remarkable similarities in the orderings...
I argue there are four classes of adjectives relevant to syntactic ordering: predicative/intersectiv...
In expressing rich, multi-dimensional thought in language, speakers are influenced by a range of fac...
When referring to objects, speakers are often more specific than necessary for the purpose of establ...
It has recently been claimed that the canonical word order of a given language constrains phonologic...