The psychology of saying what you don't mean: Celebrating the research career of Professor Albert Katz [0.03%]
语义与交际的心理学:向阿尔伯特·卡茨教授致敬
Lori Buchanan,Penny M Pexman,Debra Titone
Lori Buchanan
Public Significance Statement The human capacity for language enables people to routinely produce and comprehend highly contextualized meaning, even when that meaning differs from or is completely opposite to the component words comprising ...
Cross-script phonological activation in Chinese-English bilinguals: The effect of SOA from masked priming [0.03%]
汉语-英语双语者的跨脚本语音激活:来自掩蔽启动的S0A效应
Ge Xu,Jiexuan Lin,Yanping Dong
Ge Xu
The issue of bilingual phonological access remains unclear for bilinguals with cross-script language systems, which is especially true when the time course of phonological activation is involved. To investigate the time course of cross-scri...
Colin M MacLeod
Colin M MacLeod
This article presents a survey of the first 70 years of this journal, covering (a) the origin and subsequent history of the journal, (b) who the Editors have been, (c) how the Editors have influenced the journal, (d) the most highly cited a...
On the determination of eye gaze and arrow direction: Automaticity reconsidered [0.03%]
关于视线和箭头方向的确定:自动化再思考
Derek Besner,David McLean,Torin Young
Derek Besner
It is a widely held view that the determination of eye gaze direction is "automatic" in various senses (e.g., innate; informationally encapsulated; triggered without intent). The determination of arrow direction is also held to be automatic...
Figurative language communicates directly because it precisely demonstrates what we mean [0.03%]
比喻语言能够直接表达我们的意思因为它精确地展示了我们所说的含义
Herbert L Colston,Raymond W Gibbs
Herbert L Colston
We often believe that figurative language refers to speakers saying what they do not really mean. After all, metaphors, idioms, irony, and other varied figures of speech are presumed to communicate something beyond what they literally state...
Mahsa Morid,Nadia Bachar,Laura Sabourin
Mahsa Morid
The multi-determined model (Titone & Libben, The Mental Lexicon, 2014, 9, 473) suggests that processing of idioms depends on multiple linguistic factors (e.g., familiarity, literal plausibility, decomposability). According to this model, th...
It is not always a matter of time: Addressing the costs of metaphor and metonymy through a speed-accuracy trade-off study [0.03%]
不只是时间问题:通过速度准确性权衡实验探讨隐喻和借代的理解成本问题
Valentina Bambini,Lewis Bott,Petra B Schumacher
Valentina Bambini
One of the most debated topics in figurative language studies is whether the access to non-literal meanings is direct or indirect. Although models that argue for longer processing times for figurative compared to literal meanings have been ...
Examining the influence of perspective and prosody on expected emotional responses to irony: Evidence from event-related brain potentials [0.03%]
视角和语调对预期反语情感反应的影响:来自事件相关脑电位的证据
Dominic Thompson,Hartmut Leuthold,Ruth Filik
Dominic Thompson
Ironic language is typically more difficult to process and interpret than a literal equivalent, hence is assumed to serve several social and emotional functions not achieved by literal communication (such as politeness or introducing humor)...
Harinder Aujla
Harinder Aujla
Computational models of semantic memory have been successful in accounting for a wide range of cognitive phenomena, including word categorization, semantic priming, and release from proactive interference. Conventionally, the texts input to...
Tamra J Bireta,Dominic Guitard,Ian Neath et al.
Tamra J Bireta et al.
Despite being the prototypical test of short-term/working memory, immediate serial recall is affected by numerous lexical and long-term memory factors. Within this large literature, very few studies have examined whether performance on the ...