Results 251 to 260 of about 601,552 (281)

Rethinking task importance in the visual world paradigm

open access: yesBrain Research
Although the term Visual World Paradigm (henceforth VWP) is used to refer to the broad class of studies in which participants eye movements are measured as they listen to language, that is about a circumscribed visual display (henceforth the visual world), there are, in fact, two broadly used variants of the paradigm.
Falk Huettig
exaly   +3 more sources

Evidence from the visual world paradigm raises questions about unaccusativity and growth curve analyses

open access: yesCognition, 2020
Many syntactic theories posit a fundamental structural difference between intransitive verbs with agentive subjects (unergative verbs) and those with theme subjects (unaccusative verbs). This claim garners support from studies finding differences in the online comprehension of these verbs.
Jesse Snedeker
exaly   +5 more sources

Degree of conceptual overlap affects eye movements in visual world paradigm

Language, Cognition and Neuroscience, 2020
Several studies employing the visual world paradigm have shown that people will look at visual objects having a semantic relationship with spoken words.
Xingshan Li
exaly   +3 more sources

Visual World Paradigm Data: From Preprocessing to Nonlinear Time-Course Analysis

2017
Abstract. The Visual World Paradigm (VWP) is used to study online spoken language processing and produces time-series data. The data present challenges for analysis and they require significant preprocessing and are by nature nonlinear. Here, we discuss VWPre, a new tool for data preprocessing, and generalized additive mixed modeling (GAMM), a ...
Porretta, Vince   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Causal connectives as indicators of source information: Evidence from the visual world paradigm

open access: yesActa Psychologica, 2019
Causal relations can be presented as subjective, involving someone's reasoning, or objective, depicting a real-world cause-consequence relation. Subjective relations require longer processing times than objective relations. We hypothesize that the extra time is due to the involvement of a Subject of Consciousness (SoC) in the mental representation of ...
Yipu Wei, Ted Jm Sanders
exaly   +5 more sources

How negation is understood: Evidence from the visual world paradigm

Journal of Memory and Language, 2014
This paper explores how negation (e.g., the figure is not red) is understood using the visual world paradigm. Our hypothesis is that people will switch to the alternative affirmative (e.g., a green figure) whenever possible, but will be able to maintain the negated argument (e.g., a non-red figure) when needed.
Isabel Orenes   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

The time course of argument reactivation revealed: Using the visual world paradigm

Cognition, 2012
Previous research has found that the single argument of unaccusative verbs (such as fall) is reactivated during sentence processing, but the argument of agentive verbs (such as jump) is not (Bever & Sanz, 1997; Friedmann, Taranto, Shapiro, & Swinney, 2008).
Koring, L., Mak, W.M., Reuland, E.J.
openaire   +3 more sources

Looking at Language with the Visual World Paradigm

This is the data repository for the manuscript "Looking at Language with the Visual World Paradigm: A Systematic Review of Three Decades".
Uzun, Pınar, Kumcu, Alper
openaire   +1 more source

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