Do people predict different aspects of a predictable word to the same extent? We tested prediction of phonological and gender information by creating phonological and gender mismatches between an article and a predictable noun in Italian. Native Italian speakers read predictive sentence contexts followed by the expected noun (e.g., un incidente: ‘accident’) or another plausible, but unexpected noun, either beginning with a different phonological class (consonant vs. vowel, e.g., uno scontro: ‘collision’; phonological mismatch) or belonging to a different gender class (e.g., un'inondazione: ‘flooding’; gender mismatch). Phonological mismatch articles elicited greater negativity than expected articles at posterior channels around 450–800 ms p...
In some languages the grammatical gender of nouns can be probabilistically detected using formal cue...
Gender-to-ending consistency has been shown to influence grammatical gender retrieval in isolated wo...
Do people routinely pre-activate the meaning and even the phonological form of upcoming words? The m...
Do people predict different aspects of a predictable word to the same extent? We tested prediction o...
Do people predict different aspects of a predictable word to the same extent? We tested prediction o...
In well-known demonstrations of lexical prediction during language comprehension, pre-nominal articl...
How sensitive is pronoun processing to expectancies based on real-world knowledge and language usage...
Numerous studies report brain potential evidence for the anticipation of specific words during langu...
The present research addresses the issue of whether the orthographic-phonological information about ...
Language users have mental representations of words (e.g., occupation nouns and personal characteris...
Behavioral studies on gender-to-ending consistency in Romance language showed that people take advan...
Immediate contextual information and world knowledge allow comprehenders to anticipate incoming lang...
We investigated how listeners use gender-marked adjectives to adjust lexical predictions during sent...
Over the last years several results demonstrated that context-based expectations on both word-class ...
Gender-to-ending consistency has been shown to influence grammatical gender retrieval in isolated wo...
In some languages the grammatical gender of nouns can be probabilistically detected using formal cue...
Gender-to-ending consistency has been shown to influence grammatical gender retrieval in isolated wo...
Do people routinely pre-activate the meaning and even the phonological form of upcoming words? The m...
Do people predict different aspects of a predictable word to the same extent? We tested prediction o...
Do people predict different aspects of a predictable word to the same extent? We tested prediction o...
In well-known demonstrations of lexical prediction during language comprehension, pre-nominal articl...
How sensitive is pronoun processing to expectancies based on real-world knowledge and language usage...
Numerous studies report brain potential evidence for the anticipation of specific words during langu...
The present research addresses the issue of whether the orthographic-phonological information about ...
Language users have mental representations of words (e.g., occupation nouns and personal characteris...
Behavioral studies on gender-to-ending consistency in Romance language showed that people take advan...
Immediate contextual information and world knowledge allow comprehenders to anticipate incoming lang...
We investigated how listeners use gender-marked adjectives to adjust lexical predictions during sent...
Over the last years several results demonstrated that context-based expectations on both word-class ...
Gender-to-ending consistency has been shown to influence grammatical gender retrieval in isolated wo...
In some languages the grammatical gender of nouns can be probabilistically detected using formal cue...
Gender-to-ending consistency has been shown to influence grammatical gender retrieval in isolated wo...
Do people routinely pre-activate the meaning and even the phonological form of upcoming words? The m...