Does the language comprehension system resolve ambiguities for single- and multiple-word units similarly? We investigate this question by examining whether two constructs with robust effects on ambiguous word processing – meaning relatedness and meaning dominance – have similar influences on idiom processing. Eye tracking showed that: (1) idioms with more related figurative and literal meanings were read faster, paralleling findings for ambiguous words, and (2) meaning relatedness and meaning dominance interacted to drive eye movements on idioms just as they do on polysemous ambiguous words. These findings are consistent with a language comprehension system that resolves ambiguities similarly regardless of literality or the number of words ...
The literature on idioms often talks about an “idiom advantage,” such that familiar idioms (spill th...
Ambiguous but canonical idioms (kick the bucket) are processed fast in both their figurative (“die”)...
Subjects read sentences containing lexically ambiguous words while their eye movements were monitore...
© 2017 John Wiley & Sons Ltd In a reading-aloud experiment, we investigated the on-line processing...
It is widely accepted that the meanings and the forms of Multi Word Expressions (MWEs) are stored in...
Recent findings suggest that the right hemisphere plays a key role when readers comprehend figurativ...
Language comprehension involves activating word meanings and integrating them with the sentence cont...
Idioms are strings of words whose figurative meaning does not necessarily derive from that of the co...
This paper reports an eye movement study and the effects of salience, context, and language dominanc...
Fluently using and understanding figurative language is crucial for successful communication. For ex...
The semantic structure of many idioms is constituted by concrete (literal) actions that convey abstr...
Using eye-tracking, we investigate on-line processing of idioms in a biasing story context by native...
Idioms (e.g., break the ice, spill the beans) are ubiquitous multiword units that are often semantic...
International audienceGiora's [Giora, R., 1997. Understanding figurative and literal language: the G...
We investigated the relationships between integration of the literal meaning of the idiom words and ...
The literature on idioms often talks about an “idiom advantage,” such that familiar idioms (spill th...
Ambiguous but canonical idioms (kick the bucket) are processed fast in both their figurative (“die”)...
Subjects read sentences containing lexically ambiguous words while their eye movements were monitore...
© 2017 John Wiley & Sons Ltd In a reading-aloud experiment, we investigated the on-line processing...
It is widely accepted that the meanings and the forms of Multi Word Expressions (MWEs) are stored in...
Recent findings suggest that the right hemisphere plays a key role when readers comprehend figurativ...
Language comprehension involves activating word meanings and integrating them with the sentence cont...
Idioms are strings of words whose figurative meaning does not necessarily derive from that of the co...
This paper reports an eye movement study and the effects of salience, context, and language dominanc...
Fluently using and understanding figurative language is crucial for successful communication. For ex...
The semantic structure of many idioms is constituted by concrete (literal) actions that convey abstr...
Using eye-tracking, we investigate on-line processing of idioms in a biasing story context by native...
Idioms (e.g., break the ice, spill the beans) are ubiquitous multiword units that are often semantic...
International audienceGiora's [Giora, R., 1997. Understanding figurative and literal language: the G...
We investigated the relationships between integration of the literal meaning of the idiom words and ...
The literature on idioms often talks about an “idiom advantage,” such that familiar idioms (spill th...
Ambiguous but canonical idioms (kick the bucket) are processed fast in both their figurative (“die”)...
Subjects read sentences containing lexically ambiguous words while their eye movements were monitore...