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Ivanova, Iva; Pickering, Martin J.; McLean, Janet F.; Costa, Albert; Branigan, Holly P. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2012
We investigate whether people might come to produce utterances that they regard as ungrammatical by examining the production of ungrammatical verb-construction combinations (e.g., "The dancer donates the soldier the apple") after exposure to both grammatical and ungrammatical sentences. We contrast two accounts of how such production might take…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Persistence, Grammar, Priming
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Molinaro, Nicola; Vespignani, Francesco; Zamparelli, Roberto; Job, Remo – Journal of Memory and Language, 2011
In the present study we analyze how the cognitive system deals on-line with number agreement mismatches and whether this on-line process influences the off-line interpretation of the sentence. In two ERP experiments we monitored the on-line processing consequences of subject-verb agreement mismatches, focusing on the integration of a following…
Descriptors: Sentences, Sentence Structure, Verbs, Nouns
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Wagers, Matthew W.; Lau, Ellen F.; Phillips, Colin – Journal of Memory and Language, 2009
Much work has demonstrated so-called attraction errors in the production of subject-verb agreement (e.g., "The key to the cabinets are on the table", [Bock, J. K., & Miller, C. A. (1991). "Broken agreement." "Cognitive Psychology, 23", 45-93]), in which a verb erroneously agrees with an intervening noun. Six self-paced reading experiments examined…
Descriptors: Sentences, Verbs, Nouns, Grammar
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Bader, Markus; Haussler, Jana – Journal of Memory and Language, 2009
This paper investigates how readers process number ambiguous noun phrases in subject position. A speeded-grammaticality judgment experiment and two self-paced reading experiments were conducted involving number ambiguous subjects in German verb-end clauses. Number preferences for individual nouns were estimated by means of two questionnaire…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Sentences, Verbs, Nouns
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Kielar, A.; Joanisse, Marc F.; Hare, M. L. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2008
A key question in language processing concerns the rule-like nature of many aspects of grammar. Much research on this topic has focused on English past tense morphology, which comprises a regular, rule-like pattern (e.g., bake-baked) and a set of irregular forms that defy a rule-based description (e.g., take-took). Previous studies have used past…
Descriptors: Semantics, Verbs, Language Processing, Morphemes
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Faroqi-Shah, Yasmeen; Thompson, Cynthia K. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2007
Across most languages, verbs produced by agrammatic aphasic individuals are frequently marked by syntactically and semantically inappropriate inflectional affixes, such as "Last night, I walking home." As per language production models, verb inflection errors in English agrammatism could arise from three potential sources: encoding the verbs'…
Descriptors: Aphasia, Verbs, Grammar, Morphology (Languages)
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Staub, Adrian; Clifton, Charles, Jr.; Frazier, Lyn – Journal of Memory and Language, 2006
Two eye movement experiments explored the roles of verbal subcategorization possibilities and transitivity biases in the processing of heavy NP shift sentences in which the verb's direct object appears to the right of a post-verbal phrase. In Experiment 1, participants read sentences in which a prepositional phrase immediately followed the verb,…
Descriptors: Verbs, Sentences, Eye Movements, Language Processing
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Badecker, William; Kuminiak, Frantisek – Journal of Memory and Language, 2007
The experimental studies presented in this paper exploit agreement attraction in order to examine the mechanisms underlying the production of subject-verb agreement in Slovak. Our experiments verify that the processes which specify the gender feature on past tense verbs are subject to interference from local nouns, and that the likelihood of…
Descriptors: Morphology (Languages), Memory, Foreign Countries, Sentences
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Arregui, Ana; Clifton, Charles, Jr.; Frazier, Lyn; Moulton, Keir – Journal of Memory and Language, 2006
Traditional syntactic accounts of verb phrase ellipsis (e.g., ''Jason laughed. Sam did [ ] too.'') categorize as ungrammatical many sentences that language users find acceptable (they ''undergenerate''); semantic accounts overgenerate. We propose that a processing theory, together with a syntactic account, does a better job of describing and…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Verbs, Phrase Structure, Semantics
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Stemberger, Joseph Paul – Journal of Memory and Language, 2004
It has been shown that the processing of irregular past-tense forms is affected by phonological factors that are inherent in the relationship of the past-tense forms to other words in the lexicon (rhyming families of irregulars) or to their base forms (vowel dominance effects). This paper addresses more ephemeral phonological effects. In a…
Descriptors: Phonology, Language Processing, Morphemes, Sentences