This paper presents experimental results showing that four-year-old Mandarin- speaking children draw free choice inferences from disjunctive statements, though they are not able to compute inferences of exclusivity for disjunctive statements or other scalar implicatures. The findings connect to those of Chemla & Bott (under review) who report differences in how adults process free choice inferences versus scalar implicatures and, prima facie, the findings pose a challenge to treatments that attempt to unify inferences of both kinds. Instead, the findings appear to favour accounts that invoke different analyses for each kind of inference, such as Zimmerman 2000a, Geurts 2005, and Barker 2010. The results, however, also support the recent...
Linguistic inferences have traditionally been studied and categorized in several categories, such as...
Linguistic inferences have traditionally been studied and categorized in several categories, such as...
Sentences can be enriched by considering what the speaker does not say but could have done. Children...
This paper presents experimental results showing that four-year-old Mandarin- speaking children draw...
This paper presents experimental results showing that four-year-old Mandarin- speaking children draw...
This article presents experimental results showing that 4- and 5-year-old children are capable of dr...
A disjunctive sentence like Olivia took Logic or Algebra conveys that Olivia didn’t take both classe...
Previous developmental studies have revealed variation in children's ability to compute scalar infer...
A disjunctive sentence like Olivia took Logic or Algebra conveys that Olivia didn’t take both classe...
We present evidence that preschool children oftentimes understand disjunctive sentences as if they w...
Children struggle to derive scalar implicatures. Initially this was thought to relate to a lack of c...
Previous developmental studies have revealed variation in children’s ability to compute scalar infer...
Abstract: Linguistic inferences have traditionally been studied and categorized in several categorie...
Papafragou, AnnaUtterances like "Megan ate some of the cupcakes" are typically interpreted as "Megan...
Utterances such as “Megan ate some of the cupcakes ” are often interpreted as “Megan ate some but no...
Linguistic inferences have traditionally been studied and categorized in several categories, such as...
Linguistic inferences have traditionally been studied and categorized in several categories, such as...
Sentences can be enriched by considering what the speaker does not say but could have done. Children...
This paper presents experimental results showing that four-year-old Mandarin- speaking children draw...
This paper presents experimental results showing that four-year-old Mandarin- speaking children draw...
This article presents experimental results showing that 4- and 5-year-old children are capable of dr...
A disjunctive sentence like Olivia took Logic or Algebra conveys that Olivia didn’t take both classe...
Previous developmental studies have revealed variation in children's ability to compute scalar infer...
A disjunctive sentence like Olivia took Logic or Algebra conveys that Olivia didn’t take both classe...
We present evidence that preschool children oftentimes understand disjunctive sentences as if they w...
Children struggle to derive scalar implicatures. Initially this was thought to relate to a lack of c...
Previous developmental studies have revealed variation in children’s ability to compute scalar infer...
Abstract: Linguistic inferences have traditionally been studied and categorized in several categorie...
Papafragou, AnnaUtterances like "Megan ate some of the cupcakes" are typically interpreted as "Megan...
Utterances such as “Megan ate some of the cupcakes ” are often interpreted as “Megan ate some but no...
Linguistic inferences have traditionally been studied and categorized in several categories, such as...
Linguistic inferences have traditionally been studied and categorized in several categories, such as...
Sentences can be enriched by considering what the speaker does not say but could have done. Children...