In psycholinguistics, there has been relatively little work investigating conceptualization-how speakers decide which concepts to express. This contrasts with work in natural language generation (NLG), a subfield of artificial intelligence, where much research has explored content determination during the generation of referring expressions. Existing NLG algorithms for conceptualization during reference production do not fully explain previous psycholinguistic results, so we developed new models that we tested in three language production experiments. In our experiments, participants described target objects to another participant. In Experiment 1, either size, color, or both distinguished the target from all distractor objects; in Experime...
The use of language is one of the defining features of human cognition. Focusing here on two key fea...
How do speakers refer to entities? This question has been addressed by both psycholinguists and comp...
How do speakers refer to entities? This question has been addressed by both psycholinguists and comp...
In psycholinguistics, there has been relatively little work investigating conceptualization-how spea...
In psycholinguistics, there has been relatively little work investigating conceptualisation – how sp...
In two language production experiments, we investigated whether stored knowledge of the typical colo...
Studies have shown that speakers often include unnecessary modifiers when producing referential expr...
To communicate, speakers need to make it clear what they are talking about. Referring expressions pl...
This article introduces the topic ''Production of Referring Expressions: Bridging the Gap between Co...
This paper introduces a special issue of Language, Cognition and Neuroscience dedicated to Productio...
This article introduces the topic “Production of Referring Expressions: Bridging the Gap between Com...
This paper introduces a special issue of Language, Cognition and Neuro-science dedicated to Producti...
When speakers describe objects with atypical properties, do they include these properties in their r...
Human speakers generally find it easy to refer to entities in such a way that their hearers can dete...
A challenge for most theoretical and computational accounts of linguistic reference is the observati...
The use of language is one of the defining features of human cognition. Focusing here on two key fea...
How do speakers refer to entities? This question has been addressed by both psycholinguists and comp...
How do speakers refer to entities? This question has been addressed by both psycholinguists and comp...
In psycholinguistics, there has been relatively little work investigating conceptualization-how spea...
In psycholinguistics, there has been relatively little work investigating conceptualisation – how sp...
In two language production experiments, we investigated whether stored knowledge of the typical colo...
Studies have shown that speakers often include unnecessary modifiers when producing referential expr...
To communicate, speakers need to make it clear what they are talking about. Referring expressions pl...
This article introduces the topic ''Production of Referring Expressions: Bridging the Gap between Co...
This paper introduces a special issue of Language, Cognition and Neuroscience dedicated to Productio...
This article introduces the topic “Production of Referring Expressions: Bridging the Gap between Com...
This paper introduces a special issue of Language, Cognition and Neuro-science dedicated to Producti...
When speakers describe objects with atypical properties, do they include these properties in their r...
Human speakers generally find it easy to refer to entities in such a way that their hearers can dete...
A challenge for most theoretical and computational accounts of linguistic reference is the observati...
The use of language is one of the defining features of human cognition. Focusing here on two key fea...
How do speakers refer to entities? This question has been addressed by both psycholinguists and comp...
How do speakers refer to entities? This question has been addressed by both psycholinguists and comp...