Michael J. Spivey-Knowlton
University of Rochester
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Featured researches published by Michael J. Spivey-Knowlton.
Journal of Psycholinguistic Research | 1995
Kathleen M. Eberhard; Michael J. Spivey-Knowlton; Julie C. Sedivy; Michael K. Tanenhaus
When listeners follow spoken instructions to manipulate real objects, their eye movements to the objects are closely time locked to the referring words. We review five experiments showing that this time-locked characteristic of eye movements provides a detailed profile of the processes that underlie real-time spoken language comprehension. Together, the first four experiments showed that listerners immediately integrated lexical, sublexical, and prosodic information in the spoken input with information from the visual context to reduce the set of referents to the intended one. The fifth experiment demonstrated that a visual referential context affected the initial structuring of the linguistic input, eliminating even strong syntactic preferences that result in clear garden paths when the referential context is introduced linguistically. We argue that context affected the earliest moments of language processing because it was highly accessible and relevant to the behavioral goals of the listener.
Attention Perception & Psychophysics | 1993
Michael J. Spivey-Knowlton; Bruce Bridgeman
The Poggendorffillusion has often been explainedas purely an interactionbetween the parallels and the transversals. The present study demonstrates that additional spatial context exerts an influence on this illusion. In Experiment 1, we examined the effects of a surrounding tilted frame (complete and degraded versions) on collinearity adjustments iatheuprightandrotatedPoggendorfffigures. The frame’s orientation was always oblique. Relative to the no-frame condition, frames decreased error in collinearity adjustments in the upright-Poggendorff figure, and increased error in the rotated Poggendorfffigure. In Experiment 2, a circumscribing circle did not cause an orientation-inhibition effect (Ebenholtz & Utrie, 1982, 1983), suggestingthat the effect ofthe frame on the Poggendorif illusion may not be closely related to the rod-and-frame effect. In Experiment 3, orientation of a central texture modulated the magnitude ofthe illusion. The results do not serve to explain the mechanisms behind the Poggendorffillusion, but they do demonstrate the importance of visual reference frames in understanding perceived misalignment.
Science | 1995
Michael K. Tanenhaus; Michael J. Spivey-Knowlton; Kathleen M. Eberhard; Julie C. Sedivy
Journal of Memory and Language | 1998
Ken McRae; Michael J. Spivey-Knowlton; Michael K. Tanenhaus
Cognition | 1995
Michael J. Spivey-Knowlton; Julie C. Sedivy
Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology | 1993
Michael J. Spivey-Knowlton; John C. Trueswell; Michael K. Tanenhaus
Archive | 1999
Michael K. Tanenhaus; Michael J. Spivey-Knowlton; Joy E. Hanna; Matthew W. Crocker; Martin J. Pickering; Charles Clifton
Representation and processing of spatial expressions | 1998
Michael J. Spivey-Knowlton; Michael K. Tanenhaus; Kathleen M. Eberhard; Julie C. Sedivy
Archive | 1996
Michael J. Spivey-Knowlton; Michael K. Tanenhaus
Archive | 2000
Michael K. Tanenhaus; Michael J. Spivey-Knowlton