0000000000676823

AUTHOR

Sabine Efrenzel

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Two routes to actorhood: Lexicalized potency to act and identification of the actor role

2015

The inference of causality is a crucial cognitive ability and language processing is no exception: recent research suggests that, across different languages, the human language comprehension system attempts to identify the primary causer of the state of affairs described (the “actor”) quickly and unambiguously (Bornkessel-Schlesewsky and Schlesewsky, 2009). This identification can take place verb-independently based on certain prominence cues (e.g., case, word order, animacy). Here, we present two experiments demonstrating that actor potential is also encoded at the level of individual nouns (a king is a better actor than a beggar). Experiment 1 collected ratings for 180 German nouns on 12 …

causalityLanguage comprehensionlcsh:BF1-990Context (language use)German nounsevent-related potentialsN400Linguisticslcsh:PsychologyNounagencyPsychologyN400Original Research Articleextended argument dependency modelPsychologyAnimacyAdjectiveGeneral PsychologySentencelanguage comprehensionWord orderEvent-related potentialsactorFrontiers in Psychology
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