Title: LCS121: Psycholinguistics Class 24
1LCS121 Psycholinguistics Class 24 3/24/05
Pomona College, Spring'05
- http//www.linguistics.pomona.edu/LGCS121Spring200
5/index.html - Asst. Prof. Martin Hackl
- Mason Hall 110B
- 18927
- Martin.Hackl_at_pomona.edu
2Processing Studies of Scalar Implicatures
StortoTanenhaus(2004) Are Scalar Implicatures
Computed Online? Scalar implicatures with
OR. (1) a. John is sick or out partying.
b. John is sick. c.? John is not out
partying. 2) a. Anybody who is an American
citizen or has already checked their bags can
go to the front of the line. b. Mary is
American who has checked her bags. c.? Mary
can go the front of the line.
LCS121 Psycholinguistics
Spring 2005Prof. Hackl
TR 935 1050
3Scalar Implicatures with OR
Truth-table for inclusive or Truth-table for
exclusive or p q p v q p q (p v q) (p
q) 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 0
1 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 1
1 0 0 0 0 0 0 A Gricean
Analysis - And and or are scalar alternatives
with gt v because p q asymmetrically
entails p v q. - Maxim of Quantity - The
fact that the speaker uses a weaker expression in
place of a stronger one implicates that the
speaker was not in the position to assert
the stronger statement.
LCS121 Psycholinguistics
Spring 2005Prof. Hackl
TR 935 1050
4Scalar Implicatures with OR
Where and when do scalar implicatures of this
sort arise? (1) a. Every guest who had fish or
chicken got sick. b./ Every guest who had
fish or chicken but not both fish and chicken
got sick. (2) a. If John had fish or chicken
he will get sick. b./ If John had fish or
chicken but not both he will get sick. (3) a. It
is not the case that John was talking to Mary or
Sue. b./ It is not the case that John was
talking to Mary or Sue not to both. (4) a. If
John was talking to Mary or Sue his wife will be
angry. b./ If John was talking Mary or
Sue but not to both Mary and Sue his wife will
be angry.
LCS121 Psycholinguistics
Spring 2005Prof. Hackl
TR 935 1050
5Scalar Implicatures with OR
Intrusive Implicatures Levinson (2000) (1)
a. AIDS vaccination will cause significant
mortality. but losing some of the people is
better than losing at least some and perhaps
all of it. (2) a. Any mother with three
children is happier than any mother with four.
b. Any mother with at least three
children is happier than any mother with at
least four. c. (?) Any mother with a boy
or a girl is happier than any mother with a boy
and a girl. (MH) (3) a. A nuclear family
with three children is smaller than a nuclear
family with four. b. A student who cheats
on some exams is better than one who cheats on
all. c. A family with a grandmother or a
grandfather is smaller than a family with a
grandmother and a grandfather. (MH)
LCS121 Psycholinguistics
Spring 2005Prof. Hackl
TR 935 1050
6Scalar Implicatures with OR
(4) If you ate some of the cookies and no one
else ate any, then there must still be some
left. (5) If you ate the cookies or the
cake and no one else ate any of the cookies or
the cake, then there must still be either the
cookies or the cake left. (6) a. A nuclear
family with three children is smaller than a
nuclear family with four. b. A student
who cheats on some exams is better than one who
cheats on all.
LCS121 Psycholinguistics
Spring 2005Prof. Hackl
TR 935 1050
7Eye-Tracking in the Language Processing
Reading generally self-paced reading is believed
to be as sensitive to real time processing
effects of grammatical phenomena as
eye-tracking. Caveat slow-down in self paced
reading does not indicate back-tracking
(regression of eye-movements) Visual Search
Paradigms - To what extent does
linguistic form determine how you look for
information in the world? - To what
extent does information about the world effect
your (real time) processing - What
is the time course of integrating linguistic and
non- linguistic information.
LCS121 Psycholinguistics
Spring 2005Prof. Hackl
TR 935 1050
8BezuidenhoutMorris(2004) Cancellation of Scalar
Implicatures
Cancellation of Implicatures Evidence from
Eye-movements in Reading (1) a Some books had
color pictures. In fact all of them did, which
is why the teachers liked them. a Some
books had color pictures. In fact all of them
did, which is why the teachers liked them.
b Many books had color pictures. In fact all of
them did, which is why the teachers liked
them. c. The books had color pictures. In
fact all of them did, which is why the teachers
liked them. Filler items (2) Some books had
color pictures. In fact all of the pictures were
highly colored, which is why the children liked
them
LCS121 Psycholinguistics
Spring 2005Prof. Hackl
TR 935 1050
9BezuidenhoutMorris(2004) Cancellation of Scalar
Implicatures
No significant difference in how much
back-tracking to some/many/the or at the end of
the sentence.
LCS121 Psycholinguistics
Spring 2005Prof. Hackl
TR 935 1050
10Tanenhaus et al. (1995)
- Modularity in sentence processing
- First pass parsing was/is believed to be
informationally encapsulated similar (hence
modular). - a The horse raced past the barn fell.
- b. John and Mary like to race their horses.
The horse raced past the barn fell. - (2) () Put the apple on the towel in the box.
LCS121 Psycholinguistics
Spring 2005Prof. Hackl
TR 935 1050
11Head-mounted eye-tracking
LCS121 Psycholinguistics
Spring 2005Prof. Hackl
TR 935 1050
12Tanenhaus et al. (1995)
Put the apple on the towel in the box.
LCS121 Psycholinguistics
Spring 2005Prof. Hackl
TR 935 1050
13More vs. Fewer
14More vs. Fewer
15More vs. Fewer
16Ann has more diamonds than Bill.
2
1
17Bill has fewer diamonds than Ann.
1
2
3
18In the next picture you will see a cow, a camel
and a pig who has some apples and a pumpkin to
give away.
19In the next picture you will see a cow, a camel
and a pig who has some apples and a pumpkin to
give away.
20The pig gave more apples to the camel than to the
cow.
21The pig gave more apples to the camel than to the
cow.
22The witch gave more oranges to the boy than to
the girl.
23The pig gave more apples to the camel than to the
cow.
24Fewer Apples
25The pig gave fewer apples to the cow than to the
camel.
26Its almost as if a fewer than b triggers
- Ann Bill
- Does A have more than B? No!
- Does B have more than A? Yes.
27Expected Pattern
-
- MoreT
- MoreF
- FewerT
-
- FewerF
-
A
B
28Expected Pattern
-
- MoreT AgtB
- MoreF
- FewerT
-
- FewerF
-
A
B
29Expected Pattern
-
- MoreT AgtB AgtB
- MoreF
- FewerT
-
- FewerF
-
A
B
30Expected Pattern
-
- MoreT AgtB AgtB
- MoreF ?(AgtB)
- FewerT
-
- FewerF
-
A
B
31Expected Pattern
-
- MoreT AgtB AgtB
- MoreF ?(AgtB) AgtB
- FewerT
-
- FewerF
-
A
B
32Expected Pattern
-
- MoreT AgtB AgtB
- MoreF ?(AgtB) AgtB
- FewerT ?(AgtB)
- BgtA
- FewerF
-
A
B
33Expected Pattern
-
- MoreT AgtB AgtB
- MoreF ?(AgtB) AgtB
- FewerT ?(AgtB) BgtA
- BgtA
- FewerF
-
A
B
34Expected Pattern
-
- MoreT AgtB AgtB
- MoreF ?(AgtB) AgtB
- FewerT ?(AgtB) BgtA
- BgtA
- FewerF AgtB ?
- ?(BgtA)
A
B
35Expected Pattern
-
- MoreT AgtB AgtB
- MoreF ?(AgtB) AgtB
- FewerT ?(AgtB) BgtA
- BgtA
- FewerF AgtB ? BgtA
- ?(BgtA)
A
B
36False Start Pattern
-
- MoreT ?(BgtA) AgtB
- AgtB
- MoreF
-
- FewerT
-
- FewerF
-
A
B
37False Start Pattern
-
- MoreT ?(BgtA) AgtB
- AgtB
- MoreF BgtA ? AgtB
- ?(BgtA)
- FewerT
-
- FewerF
-
A
B
38False Start Pattern
-
- MoreT ?(BgtA) AgtB
- AgtB
- MoreF BgtA ? AgtB
- ?(BgtA)
- FewerT BgtA BgtA
-
- FewerF
-
A
B
39False Start Pattern
-
- MoreT ?(BgtA) AgtB
- AgtB
- MoreF BgtA ? AgtB
- ?(BgtA)
- FewerT BgtA BgtA
-
- FewerF ?(BgtA) BgtA
-
A
B
40Expected Pattern
-
- MT AgtB AgtB
- MF ?(AgtB) AgtB
- FT ?(AgtB) BgtA
- BgtA
- FF AgtB ? BgtA
- ?(BgtA)
-
- MT ?(BgtA) AgtB
- AgtB
- MF BgtA ? AgtB
- ?(AgtB)
- FT BgtA BgtA
- FF ?(BgtA) BgtA
B
A
B
A
41Expected Pattern
-
- MT AgtB AgtB
- MF ?(AgtB) AgtB
- FT ?(AgtB) BgtA
- BgtA
- FF AgtB ? BgtA
- ?(BgtA)
-
- MT ?(BgtA) AgtB
- AgtB
- MF BgtA ? AgtB
- ?(AgtB)
- FT BgtA BgtA
- FF ?(BgtA) BgtA
B
A
B
A
42The witch gave fewer oranges to the girl than to
the boy. False Start.
43Expected Pattern
-
- MT AgtB AgtB
- MF ?(AgtB) AgtB
- FT ?(AgtB) BgtA
- BgtA
- FF AgtB ? BgtA
- ?(BgtA)
-
- MT ?(BgtA) AgtB
- AgtB
- MF BgtA ? AgtB
- ?(AgtB)
- FT BgtA BgtA
- FF ?(BgtA) BgtA
B
A
B
A
44Expected Pattern
-
- MT AgtB AgtB
- MF ?(AgtB) AgtB
- FT ?(AgtB) BgtA
- BgtA
- FF AgtB ? BgtA
- ?(BgtA)
-
- MT ?(BgtA) AgtB
- AgtB
- MF BgtA ? AgtB
- ?(AgtB)
- FT BgtA BgtA
- FF ?(BgtA) BgtA
B
A
B
A
45The owl gave fewer coins to the weasel than to
the turtle.
46Expected Pattern
-
- MT AgtB AgtB
- MF ?(AgtB) AgtB
- FT ?(AgtB) BgtA
- BgtA
- FF AgtB ? BgtA
- ?(BgtA)
-
- MT ?(BgtA) AgtB
- AgtB
- MF BgtA ? AgtB
- ?(AgtB)
- FT BgtA BgtA
- FF ?(BgtA) BgtA
B
A
B
A
47The owl gave more coins to the weasel than to the
turtle.
48Expected Pattern
-
- MT AgtB AgtB
- MF ?(AgtB) AgtB
- FT ?(AgtB) BgtA
- BgtA
- FF AgtB ? BgtA
- ?(BgtA)
-
- MT ?(BgtA) AgtB
- AgtB
- MF BgtA ? AgtB
- ?(AgtB)
- FT BgtA BgtA
- FF ?(BgtA) BgtA
B
A
B
A
49Expected Pattern
-
- MT AgtB AgtB
- MF ?(AgtB) AgtB
- FT ?(AgtB) BgtA
- BgtA
- FF AgtB ? BgtA
- ?(BgtA)
-
- MT ?(BgtA) AgtB
- AgtB
- MF BgtA ? AgtB
- ?(AgtB)
- FT BgtA BgtA
- FF ?(BgtA) BgtA
B
A
B
A
50The pig gave more apples to the camel than to the
cow.
51Expected Pattern
-
- MT AgtB AgtB
- MF ?(AgtB) AgtB
- FT ?(AgtB) BgtA
- BgtA
- FF AgtB ? BgtA
- ?(BgtA)
-
- MT ?(BgtA) AgtB
- AgtB
- MF BgtA ? AgtB
- ?(AgtB)
- FT BgtA BgtA
- FF ?(BgtA) BgtA
B
A
B
A
52StortoTanenhaus (2004)
How early do speakers compute the scalar
implicature but not both triggered by
(un-embedded) or? Method Head mounted
eye-tracking allows you to monitor how fast
speakers identify the target object of an action.
How early do speakers compute scalar
implicatures to speed up the search? The grapes
or the oranges are next to some locks. Please
click on those locks.
LCS121 Psycholinguistics
Spring 2005Prof. Hackl
TR 935 1050
53StortoTanenhaus (2004)
Baseline AND Procedure subjects see the scene
for 3 seconds. Then an instruction as the one
below played over speakers The bananas and the
grapes are next to some locks. Please click on
those locks.
LCS121 Psycholinguistics
Spring 2005Prof. Hackl
TR 935 1050
54StortoTanenhaus (2004)
Baseline AND The bananas and the grapes are
next to some locks. Please click on those locks.
LCS121 Psycholinguistics
Spring 2005Prof. Hackl
TR 935 1050
55StortoTanenhaus (2004)
Baseline AND The bananas and the grapes are
next to some locks. Please click on those locks.
LCS121 Psycholinguistics
Spring 2005Prof. Hackl
TR 935 1050
56StortoTanenhaus (2004)
OR The the grapes or the oranges are next to
some locks. Please click on those locks.
LCS121 Psycholinguistics
Spring 2005Prof. Hackl
TR 935 1050
57StortoTanenhaus (2004)
Baseline AND The bananas and the grapes are
next to some locks. Please click on those locks.
LCS121 Psycholinguistics
Spring 2005Prof. Hackl
TR 935 1050
58End