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Dive into the research topics where Alexis Wellwood is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexis Wellwood.


Journal of Semantics | 2012

Measuring and comparing individuals and events

Alexis Wellwood; Valentine Hacquard; Roumyana Pancheva

This squib investigates parallels between nominal and verbal comparatives. Building on key insights of Hackl (2000) and Bale & Barner (2009), we show that more behaves uniformly when it combines with nominal and verbal predicates: (i) it cannot combine with singular count NPs or perfective telic VPs; (ii) grammatical properties of the predicates determine the scale of comparison—plural marked NPs and habitual VPs are compared on a scale of cardinality, whereas mass NPs and perfective (atelic) VPs are (often) compared along non-cardinal, though monotonic, scales. Taken together, our findings confirm and strengthen parallels that have independently been drawn between the nominal and verbal domains. In addition, our discussion and data, drawn from English, Spanish, and Bulgarian, suggest that the semantic contribution of more can be given a uniform analysis.


Archive | 2018

Decomposition and Processing of Negative Adjectival Comparatives

Daniel Tucker; Barbara Tomaszewicz; Alexis Wellwood

Recent proposals in the semantics literature hold that the negative comparative less and negative adjectives like short in English are morphosyntactically complex, unlike their positive counterparts more and tall. For instance, the negative adjective short might decompose into little tall (Rullmann, Dissertation, 1995; Heim, Proceedings of Semantics and Linguistic Theory, vol. 16, 2006, Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung, vol. 12, 2008; Buring, Proceedings of Semantics and Linguistic Theory, vol. 17, 2007). Positing a silent little as part of adjectives like short correctly predicts that they are semantically opposite to tall; we seek evidence for this decomposition in language understanding in English and Polish. Our visual verification tasks compare processing of positive and negative comparatives with taller and shorter against that of less symbolically-rich mathematical statements, \(A > B\), \(B < A\). We find that both language and math statements generally lead to monotonic increases in processing load along with the number of negative symbols (as predicted for language by e.g. Clark and Chase, Cognitive Psychology, 3:472–517, 1972). Our study is the first to examine the processing of the gradable predicates tall and short cross-linguistically, as well as in contrast to extensionally-equivalent, and putatively non-linguistic stimuli (cf. Deschamps et al, Cognition, 143:115–128, 2015 with quantificational determiners).


Language Learning and Development | 2016

Syntactic and Lexical Inference in the Acquisition of Novel Superlatives.

Alexis Wellwood; Annie Gagliardi; Jeffrey Lidz

ABSTRACT Acquiring the correct meanings of words expressing quantities (seven, most) and qualities (red, spotty) present a challenge to learners. Understanding how children succeed at this requires understanding, not only of what kinds of data are available to them, but also the biases and expectations they bring to the learning task. The results of our word-learning task with 4-year-olds indicate that a “syntactic bootstrapping” hypothesis correctly predicts a bias toward quantity-based interpretations when a novel word appears in the syntactic position of a determiner but also leaves open the explanation of a bias towards quality-based interpretations when the same word is presented in the syntactic position of an adjective. We develop four computational models that differentially encode how lexical, conceptual, and perceptual factors could generate the latter bias. Simulation results suggest it results from a combination of lexical bias and perceptual encoding.


The Baltic International Yearbook of Cognition, Logic and Communication | 2014

Talking about Causing Events

Christopher Vogel; Alexis Wellwood; Rachel Dudley; J Brendan Ritchie

Questions about the nature of the relationship between language and extralinguistic cognition are old, but only recently has a new view emerged that allows for the systematic investigation of claims about linguistic structure, based on how it is understood or utilized outside of the language system. Our paper represents a case study for this interaction in the domain of event semantics. We adopt a transparency thesis about the relationship between linguistic structure and extralinguistic cognition, investigating whether different lexico-syntactic structures can differentially recruit the visual causal percept. A prominent analysis of causative verbs like move suggests reference to two distinct events and a causal relationship between them, whereas non-causative verbs like push do not so refer. In our study, we present English speakers with simple scenes that either do or do not support the perception of a causal link, and manipulate (between subjects) a one-sentence instruction for the evaluation of the scene. Preliminary results suggest that competent speakers of English are more likely to judge causative constructions than non-causative constructions as true of a scene where causal features are present in the scene. Implications for a new approach to the investigation of linguistic meanings and future directions are discussed.


Acta Linguistica Academica | 2018

How similar are objects and events

Alexis Wellwood; Susan J. Hespos; Lance J. Rips

Semanticists often assume an ontology for natural language that includes not only ordinary objects, but also events, and other sorts of entities. We link this ontology to how speakers represent static and dynamic entities. Specifically, we test how speakers determine whether an entity counts as “atomic” by using count vs. mass (e.g., some gleebs, some gleeb) and distributive vs. non-distributive descriptions (e.g., gleeb every second or so, gleeb around a little). We then seek evidence for atomic representation in a non-linguistic task. Ultimately we suggest that natural language ontology reveals properties of language-independent conceptualization.


Semantics and Pragmatics | 2012

Embedding epistemic modals in English: A corpus-based study

Valentine Hacquard; Alexis Wellwood


Linguistics and Philosophy | 2015

On the semantics of comparison across categories

Alexis Wellwood


Glossa: a journal of general linguistics | 2016

Addressing the 'two interface' problem: Comparatives and superlatives

Ewan Dunbar; Alexis Wellwood


Semantics and Linguistic Theory | 2009

Restrictions on the Meaning of Determiners: Typological Generalisations and Learnability

Tim Hunter; Jeffrey Lidz; Alexis Wellwood; Anastasia Conroy


Journal of Semantics | 2018

The Anatomy of a Comparative Illusion

Alexis Wellwood; Roumyana Pancheva; Valentine Hacquard; Colin Phillips

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Darko Odic

University of British Columbia

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Roumyana Pancheva

University of Southern California

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