This study focuses on a factor known to increase sentence processing complexity – negation. We sought to distill out of negation a logical property – Inference Reversal – to see whether it, and not an actual negation word, determines this complexity. First, we tested a negation-less pair of polar operators (at most, at least) in Hebrew. We found that processing time for sentences containing the Inference Reversing at most lagged behind those with at least. Second, we compared the processing of sentences containing two Inference Reversing operators (not less) to sentences with zero (ø, more) and one (not more, less). Since two Inference Reversing Operators annul Inference Reversal (“two negatives make a positive”), we asked whether their pro...
Negation comprehension is a time-consuming, resource demanding process. This study investigates whet...
approximately the same score on an objective test for their level, were presented with 8 variations ...
Previous event-related potential (ERP) studies comparing affirmative and negative sentences revealed...
Seminal studies on negation revealed that negative sentences are difficult to process, as they requi...
There is strong evidence that comprehenders can parse sentences in an incremental fashion. However, ...
Our goal in this study was to behaviorally characterize the property (or properties) that render neg...
Negation has a very long history of study. In the realm of logic, negation is seen as a simple opera...
Research shows that when processing negative sentences without context, participants often represent...
We investigate how people process negation in seman-tically distorted and metaphoric sentences. We p...
Negation has been found to affect the processing of sentences and words principally in two ways: It ...
Studies from English and German have found differences in the processing of affirmative and negative...
In experiments investigating the processing of true and false negative sentences, it is often report...
Previous work suggests that negative sentences are more dif-ficult to process than positive sentence...
This paper is devoted to the effect of negative polarity on presuppositions and scalar implicatures,...
In a seminal study, Bott & Noveck (2004) found that the computation of the scalar inference of ‘some...
Negation comprehension is a time-consuming, resource demanding process. This study investigates whet...
approximately the same score on an objective test for their level, were presented with 8 variations ...
Previous event-related potential (ERP) studies comparing affirmative and negative sentences revealed...
Seminal studies on negation revealed that negative sentences are difficult to process, as they requi...
There is strong evidence that comprehenders can parse sentences in an incremental fashion. However, ...
Our goal in this study was to behaviorally characterize the property (or properties) that render neg...
Negation has a very long history of study. In the realm of logic, negation is seen as a simple opera...
Research shows that when processing negative sentences without context, participants often represent...
We investigate how people process negation in seman-tically distorted and metaphoric sentences. We p...
Negation has been found to affect the processing of sentences and words principally in two ways: It ...
Studies from English and German have found differences in the processing of affirmative and negative...
In experiments investigating the processing of true and false negative sentences, it is often report...
Previous work suggests that negative sentences are more dif-ficult to process than positive sentence...
This paper is devoted to the effect of negative polarity on presuppositions and scalar implicatures,...
In a seminal study, Bott & Noveck (2004) found that the computation of the scalar inference of ‘some...
Negation comprehension is a time-consuming, resource demanding process. This study investigates whet...
approximately the same score on an objective test for their level, were presented with 8 variations ...
Previous event-related potential (ERP) studies comparing affirmative and negative sentences revealed...