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Dive into the research topics where Philip Hofmeister is active.

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Featured researches published by Philip Hofmeister.


Language and Cognitive Processes | 2013

The source ambiguity problem: Distinguishing the effects of grammar and processing on acceptability judgments

Philip Hofmeister; T. Florian Jaeger; Inbal Arnon; Ivan A. Sag; Neal Snider

Judgments of linguistic unacceptability may theoretically arise from either grammatical deviance or significant processing difficulty. Acceptability data are thus naturally ambiguous in theories that explicitly distinguish formal and functional constraints. Here, we consider this source ambiguity problem in the context of Superiority effects: the dispreference for ordering a wh-phrase in front of a syntactically “superior” wh-phrase in multiple wh-questions, e.g., What did who buy? More specifically, we consider the acceptability contrast between such examples and so-called D-linked examples, e.g., Which toys did which parents buy? Evidence from acceptability and self-paced reading experiments demonstrates that (i) judgments and processing times for Superiority violations vary in parallel, as determined by the kind of wh-phrases they contain, (ii) judgments increase with exposure, while processing times decrease, (iii) reading times are highly predictive of acceptability judgments for the same items, and (iv) the effects of the complexity of the wh-phrases combine in both acceptability judgments and reading times. This evidence supports the conclusion that D-linking effects are likely reducible to independently motivated cognitive mechanisms whose effects emerge in a wide range of sentence contexts. This in turn suggests that Superiority effects, in general, may owe their character to differential processing difficulty.


Archive | 2013

Islands in the grammar? Standards of evidence

Philip Hofmeister; Laura Staum Casasanto; Ivan A. Sag

When considering how a complex system operates, the observable behavior depends upon both architectural properties of the system and the principles governing its operation. As a simple example, the behavior of computer chess programs depends upon both the processing speed and resources of the computer and the programmed rules that determine how the computer selects its next move. Despite having very similar search techniques, a computer from the 1990s might make a move that its 1970s forerunner would overlook simply because it had more raw computational power. From the naive observer’s perspective, however, it is not superficially evident if a particular move is dispreferred or overlooked because of computational limitations or the search strategy and decision algorithm. In the case of computers, evidence for the source of any particular behavior can ultimately be found by inspecting the code and tracking the decision process of the computer. But with the human mind, such options are not yet available. The preference for certain behaviors and the dispreference for others may theoretically follow from cognitive limitations or from task-related principles that preclude certain kinds of cognitive operations, or from some combination of the two. This uncertainty gives rise to the fundamental problem of finding evidence for one explanation over the other. Such a problem arises in the analysis of syntactic island effects – the focus


Frontiers in Psychology | 2014

Distinctiveness and encoding effects in online sentence comprehension

Philip Hofmeister; Shravan Vasishth

In explicit memory recall and recognition tasks, elaboration and contextual isolation both facilitate memory performance. Here, we investigate these effects in the context of sentence processing: targets for retrieval during online sentence processing of English object relative clause constructions differ in the amount of elaboration associated with the target noun phrase, or the homogeneity of superficial features (text color). Experiment 1 shows that greater elaboration for targets during the encoding phase reduces reading times at retrieval sites, but elaboration of non-targets has considerably weaker effects. Experiment 2 illustrates that processing isolated superficial features of target noun phrases—here, a green word in a sentence with words colored white—does not lead to enhanced memory performance, despite triggering longer encoding times. These results are interpreted in the light of the memory models of Nairne, 1990, 2001, 2006, which state that encoding remnants contribute to the set of retrieval cues that provide the basis for similarity-based interference effects.


Language | 2010

Cognitive constraints and island effects

Philip Hofmeister; Ivan A. Sag


Archive | 2007

Representational complexity and memory retrieval in language comprehension

Philip Hofmeister


Language | 2012

How do individual cognitive differences relate to acceptability judgments?: A reply to Sprouse, Wagers, and Phillips

Philip Hofmeister; Laura Staum Casasanto; Ivan A. Sag


Archive | 2007

Locality and Accessibility in Wh-Questions

Philip Hofmeister; T. Florian Jaeger; Ivan A. Sag; Inbal Arnon; Neal Snider


Language | 2012

Misapplying working-memory tests: A reductio ad absurdum

Philip Hofmeister; Laura Staum Casasanto; Ivan A. Sag


Archive | 2007

Retrievability and Gradience in Filler-Gap Dependencies

Philip Hofmeister


Natural Language and Linguistic Theory | 2010

A linearization account of either . . . or constructions

Philip Hofmeister

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Inbal Arnon

University of Manchester

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Inbal Arnon

University of Manchester

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Inbal Arnon

University of Manchester

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