This thesis presents experimental and computational modeling studies on the mental representations of the natural language quantifiers (e.g., most, many, few, more than half, and fewer than half). According to the dominant logical approach in cognitive semantics, the meaning of quantifiers can be expressed in the form of truth conditions. The thesis argues that the logical perspective on quantifiers is insufficient to capture psychological phenomena related to the processing of quantified sentences. The logical perspective thus should be extended to a cognitive perspective. The cognitive perspective considers both truth-conditional representations of quantifiers and individual differences in meaning representations. It also stresses the imp...
Subjects listened to a story containing sentences with five different quantifiers (all, many, some, ...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2021Languages undoubtedly exhibit many surface differen...
We compared the processing of natural language quantifiers in a group of patients with schizophrenia...
This thesis presents experimental and computational modeling studies on the mental representations o...
We examine the verification of simple quantifiers in natural language from a computational model per...
Defining the meaning of vague quantifiers (‘few’, ‘most’, ‘all’) has been, and still is, the Holy Gr...
Previous work has shown that the meaning of a quantifier such as “many” or “few” depends in part on ...
This paper is concerned with constraints on learning quantifiers, particularly those cognitive on hu...
This paper presents a new connectionist model of the grounding of linguistic quantifiers in percepti...
Abstract. This paper presents a new connectionist model of the grounding of linguistic quantifiers i...
In this study we test individual differences in the meaning representations of two natural language ...
In this study we test individual differences in the meaning representations of two natural language ...
In this study we test individual differences in the meaning representations of two natural language ...
“Each” and “every” can be used to express the same truth-conditions but differ in their contexts of ...
The fact that all natural language quantifiers are conservative raises the question of whether peopl...
Subjects listened to a story containing sentences with five different quantifiers (all, many, some, ...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2021Languages undoubtedly exhibit many surface differen...
We compared the processing of natural language quantifiers in a group of patients with schizophrenia...
This thesis presents experimental and computational modeling studies on the mental representations o...
We examine the verification of simple quantifiers in natural language from a computational model per...
Defining the meaning of vague quantifiers (‘few’, ‘most’, ‘all’) has been, and still is, the Holy Gr...
Previous work has shown that the meaning of a quantifier such as “many” or “few” depends in part on ...
This paper is concerned with constraints on learning quantifiers, particularly those cognitive on hu...
This paper presents a new connectionist model of the grounding of linguistic quantifiers in percepti...
Abstract. This paper presents a new connectionist model of the grounding of linguistic quantifiers i...
In this study we test individual differences in the meaning representations of two natural language ...
In this study we test individual differences in the meaning representations of two natural language ...
In this study we test individual differences in the meaning representations of two natural language ...
“Each” and “every” can be used to express the same truth-conditions but differ in their contexts of ...
The fact that all natural language quantifiers are conservative raises the question of whether peopl...
Subjects listened to a story containing sentences with five different quantifiers (all, many, some, ...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2021Languages undoubtedly exhibit many surface differen...
We compared the processing of natural language quantifiers in a group of patients with schizophrenia...