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    sj-pdf-1-qjp-10.1177_17470218231157268 – Supplemental material for The production of referring expressions is influenced by the likelihood of next mention

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    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-qjp-10.1177_17470218231157268 for The production of referring expressions is influenced by the likelihood of next mention by Oliver Bott and Torgrim Solstad in Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology</p

    A Festschrift for Kjell Johan Sæbø : in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the celebration of his 50th birthday

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    The festschrift contains contributions from the following authors: Bergljot Behrens, Reinhard Blutner, Pål Kristian Eriksen, Cathrine Fabricius-Hansen, Jens Erik Fenstad, Atle Grønn, Janne Bondi Johannessen, Sveta Krasikova, Jan Tore Lønning, Doris Penka, Wiebke Ramm, Torgrim Solstad, Arnim von Stechow, Ingebjørg Tonne, Eirik Welo, Henk Zeevat and Thomas Ede Zimmerman

    Some New Observations on ‘Because (of)’

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    Occasion verbs

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    Supplementary materials for the paper "Cataphoric Resolution of Projective Content: The Case of Occasion Verbs", to appear in "Semantics &amp; Pragmatics"

    Data_Sheet_1_Implicit causality and consequentiality of action verbs.pdf

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    Investigating Implicit Causality (I-Caus) and Implicit Consequentiality (I-Cons) biases associated with action verbs (e.g., Peter praised/healed Mary because/and so …), this paper sheds light on the nature of the coreference and coherence biases associated with Implicit Causality verbs. We provide evidence in support of the Two-Mechanism Account, according to which I-Caus and I-Cons are driven by two different mechanisms: While I-Caus derives from empty explanatory slots for explanations in verb semantics, I-Cons follows from the general discourse principle of Discourse Contiguity. Evidence is provided by three production experiments in German investigating the coreference and coherence properties of agent-evocator and causative agent-patient verbs (e.g., praise vs. heal), which differ with regard to the availability of explanatory slots for I-Caus. Experiment 1 established I-Caus and I-Cons coreference biases for the two verb classes, while Experiment 2 investigated their corresponding coherence biases, showing that they pattern as predicted on the Two-Mechanism Account. Finally, Experiment 3 provided empirical evidence on the fine-grained types of causal relations associated with I-Caus and I-Cons for the two verb types.</p

    Production of Referring Expressions and Next Mention

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    This OSF archive contains supplemental materials to the paper "The Production of Referring Expressions is influenced by the Likelihood of Next Mention" published in Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psycholog

    Cataphoric presuppositions: The case of occasion verbs

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    This repository contains a short video presentation and an abstract for our SALT 32 (Mexicon City) virtual poster presentation

    Cataphoric presuppositions: The case of occasion verbs

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    This repository contains a short video presentation and an abstract for our SALT 32 (Mexicon City) virtual poster presentation

    Non-culminating accomplishments in English and German

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    This is a conceptual replication and extension of a study reported in Bott &amp; Hamm (2014). The study has been submitted to CogSci 2024. This osf archive contains the complete set of stimulus materials tested in the seven experiments. It also contains the data as well as the analysis scripts of the linear mixed-effects regression analysis as R markdown file. The study (including Exps. 1-4) was preregistered at AsPredicted.org. Exp. 5-7 were follow-up experiments to this original study plan (see Wiki for links to preregistrations)
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