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Counting on number: effects of number information on grammatical processing of mass and count nouns

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posted on 2017-01-31, 07:45 authored by Nora Fieder, Hua-Chen Wang, Britta Biedermann, Lyndsey Nickels

Previous research has found an influence of semantic number (SINGLE, MULTIPLE) on grammatical processing of mass nouns in people with aphasia. This is the first study to investigate these effects in language-unimpaired individuals. In two experiments, participants had to decide which were the appropriate determiners (e.g. Experiment 1: asingularcount – somemass/plural count) for the name of mass and count noun pictures that were depicted either as single (one bulb of garlicmass, one catcount) or as multiple objects (three bulbs of garlicmass, three catscount). Semantic number congruency between depictions and determiners was manipulated for mass nouns. A semantic number congruency effect was found in both experiments with faster and more accurate determiner decisions in the number congruent (e.g. Experiment 1: MULTIPLE) compared to the number incongruent condition (e.g. Experiment 1: SINGLE). These results provide further evidence for an influence of semantic number information on lexical-syntactic processing of mass nouns.

Funding

During the preparation of this paper, Nora Fieder was funded by ARC Centre of Excellence in Cognition and its Disorders (CCD) until April 2016 and subsequently by a postdoctoral stipend of the Berlin School of Mind and Brain. Lyndsey Nickels was funded by an ARC Future Fellowship [grant number FT120100102].

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    Language Cognition and Neuroscience

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