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DOI: 10.1080/23273798.2014.981195
¤ OpenAccess: Green
This work has “Green” OA status. This means it may cost money to access on the publisher landing page, but there is a free copy in an OA repository.

The neural computation of scalar implicature

Joshua K. Hartshorne,Jesse Snedeker,Sharl S. Azar,Albert E. Kim

Implicature
Sentence
Linguistics
2014
Language comprehension involves not only constructing the literal meaning of a sentence but also going beyond the literal meaning to infer what was meant but not said. One widely-studied test case is scalar implicature: The inference that, e.g., Sally ate some of the cookies implies she did not eat all of them. Research is mixed on whether this is due to a rote, grammaticalized procedure or instead a complex, contextualized inference. We find that in sentences like If Sally ate some of the cookies, then the rest are on the counter, that the rest triggers a late, sustained positivity relative to Sally ate some of the cookies, and the rest are on the counter. This is consistent with behavioral results and linguistic theory suggesting that the former sentence does not trigger a scalar implicature. This motivates a view on which scalar implicature is contextualized but dependent on grammatical structure.
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    The neural computation of scalar implicature” is a paper by Joshua K. Hartshorne Jesse Snedeker Sharl S. Azar Albert E. Kim published in 2014. It has an Open Access status of “green”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.