2023
DOI: 10.31234/osf.io/w53k8
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How do linguistic illusions arise? Rational inference and good-enough processing as competing latent processes within individuals

Abstract: Non-literal interpretations of implausible sentences such as "The mother gave the candle the daughter" have been taken as evidence for a rational error-correction mechanism that reconstructs the intended utterance from the ill-formed input ("... gave the daughter the candle"). However, the good-enough processing framework offers an alternative explanation: readers sometimes miss problematic aspects of sentences because they are only processing them superficially, which leads to acceptability illusions. As a sy… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(6 citation statements)
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“…The prevalence of the "event comparison" is robust across all items. Furthermore, the fact that more than half of the answers led to plausible interpretations supports the hypothesis that participants were making rational inferences over the comparative illusion sentence, which is consistent with Paape (2023).…”
Section: Percentage Of Different Categories Of Interpretations Across...supporting
confidence: 68%
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“…The prevalence of the "event comparison" is robust across all items. Furthermore, the fact that more than half of the answers led to plausible interpretations supports the hypothesis that participants were making rational inferences over the comparative illusion sentence, which is consistent with Paape (2023).…”
Section: Percentage Of Different Categories Of Interpretations Across...supporting
confidence: 68%
“…This CI phenomenon was first mentioned in Montalbetti (1984) and has been studied in various psycholinguistic studies (Christensen, 2010(Christensen, , 2016Kelley, 2018;Langsford et al, 2019;Leivada, 2020;O'Connor, 2015;O'Connor et al, 2013;Paape, 2023;Pham, 2022;Wellwood et al, 2018;. However, a comprehensive explanation is still lacking.…”
Section: Comparative Illusions Are Evidence Of Rational Inference In ...mentioning
confidence: 93%
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