Dato Abashidze
Bielefeld University
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Featured researches published by Dato Abashidze.
Frontiers in Psychology | 2011
Pia Knoeferle; Maria Nella Carminati; Dato Abashidze; Kai Essig
Eye-tracking findings suggest people prefer to ground their spoken language comprehension by focusing on recently seen events more than anticipating future events: When the verb in NP1-VERB-ADV-NP2 sentences was referentially ambiguous between a recently depicted and an equally plausible future clipart action, listeners fixated the target of the recent action more often at the verb than the object that hadn’t yet been acted upon. We examined whether this inspection preference generalizes to real-world events, and whether it is (vs. isn’t) modulated by how often people see recent and future events acted out. In a first eye-tracking study, the experimenter performed an action (e.g., sugaring pancakes), and then a spoken sentence either referred to that action or to an equally plausible future action (e.g., sugaring strawberries). At the verb, people more often inspected the pancakes (the recent target) than the strawberries (the future target), thus replicating the recent-event preference with these real-world actions. Adverb tense, indicating a future versus past event, had no effect on participants’ visual attention. In a second study we increased the frequency of future actions such that participants saw 50/50 future and recent actions. During the verb people mostly inspected the recent action target, but subsequently they began to rely on tense, and anticipated the future target more often for future than past tense adverbs. A corpus study showed that the verbs and adverbs indicating past versus future actions were equally frequent, suggesting long-term frequency biases did not cause the recent-event preference. Thus, (a) recent real-world actions can rapidly influence comprehension (as indexed by eye gaze to objects), and (b) people prefer to first inspect a recent action target (vs. an object that will soon be acted upon), even when past and future actions occur with equal frequency. A simple frequency-of-experience account cannot accommodate these findings.
Cognitive Science | 2014
Dato Abashidze; Maria Nella Carminati; Pia Knoeferle
Archive | 2013
Dato Abashidze; Pia Knoeferle; Maria Nella Carminati
conference cognitive science | 2011
Dato Abashidze; Pia Knoeferle; Maria Nella Carminati; Kai Essig
Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing (AMLaP) | 2016
Dato Abashidze; Craig Chambers
Cognitive Science | 2015
Dato Abashidze; Pia Knoeferle; Maria Nella Carminati
Archive | 2017
Dato Abashidze
Cognitive Science | 2017
Dato Abashidze; Pia Knoeferle
Tagung experimentell arbeitender Psychologen | 2015
Dato Abashidze; Pia Knoeferle
Proceedings of the 2nd International Workshop on Vision and Eye Tracking in Natural Environments and Solutions & Algorithms for Gaze Analysis (SAGA 2015) | 2015
Kai Essig; Dato Abashidze; P Manjunath; Thomas Schack