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Prototypicality in sentence production
Authors:Onishi Kristine H  Murphy Gregory L  Bock Kathryn
Affiliation:a Department of Psychology, Stewart Biology Building, 1205 Dr. Penfield Avenue, McGill University, Montreal, H3A 1B1 Canada
b Department of Psychology, New York University, 6 Washington Place, 8th Floor, New York, NY 10003, USA
c Department of Psychology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 603 E. Daniel St., Champaign, IL 61820, USA
Abstract:Three cued-recall experiments examined the effect of category typicality on the ordering of words in sentence production. Past research has found that typical items tend to be mentioned before atypical items in a phrase—a pattern usually associated with lexical variables (like word frequency), and yet typicality is a conceptual variable. Experiment 1 revealed that an appropriate conceptual framework was necessary to yield the typicality effect. Experiment 2 tested ad hoc categories that do not have prior representations in long-term memory and yielded no typicality effect. Experiment 3 used carefully matched sentences in which two category members appeared in the same or in different phrases. Typicality affected word order only when the two words appeared in the same phrase. These results are consistent with an account in which typicality has its origin in conceptual structure, which leads to differences in lexical accessibility in appropriate contexts.
Keywords:Sentence production   Categories   Typicality   Word order   Concepts   Word meaning   Psycholinguistics
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