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Dive into the research topics where Sandra Villata is active.

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Featured researches published by Sandra Villata.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2018

Encoding and Retrieval Interference in Sentence Comprehension: Evidence from Agreement

Sandra Villata; Whitney Tabor; Julie Franck

Long-distance verb-argument dependencies generally require the integration of a fronted argument when the verb is encountered for sentence interpretation. Under a parsing model that handles long-distance dependencies through a cue-based retrieval mechanism, retrieval is hampered when retrieval cues also resonate with non-target elements (retrieval interference). However, similarity-based interference may also stem from interference arising during the encoding of elements in memory (encoding interference), an effect that is not directly accountable for by a cue-based retrieval mechanism. Although encoding and retrieval interference are clearly distinct at the theoretical level, it is difficult to disentangle the two on empirical grounds, since encoding interference may also manifest at the retrieval region. We report two self-paced reading experiments aimed at teasing apart the role of each component in gender and number subject-verb agreement in Italian and English object relative clauses. In Italian, the verb does not agree in gender with the subject, thus providing no cue for retrieval. In English, although present tense verbs agree in number with the subject, past tense verbs do not, allowing us to test the role of number as a retrieval cue within the same language. Results from both experiments converge, showing similarity-based interference at encoding, and some evidence for an effect at retrieval. After having pointed out the non-negligible role of encoding in sentence comprehension, and noting that Lewis and Vasishth’s (2005) ACT-R model of sentence processing, the most fully developed cue-based retrieval approach to sentence processing does not predict encoding effects, we propose an augmentation of this model that predicts these effects. We then also propose a self-organizing sentence processing model (SOSP), which has the advantage of accounting for retrieval and encoding interference with a single mechanism.


Lingua | 2016

Intervention effects and Relativized Minimality: New experimental evidence from graded judgments

Sandra Villata; Luigi Rizzi; Julie Franck


Archive | 2015

Intervention effects in wh-islands and non-islands: experimental evidence

Sandra Villata; Luigi Rizzi; Julie Franck


Archive | 2016

SEMANTIC SIMILARITY EFFECTS ON WEAK ISLANDS ACCEPTABILITY

Sandra Villata; Julie Franck


CUNY (Conference on Human Sentence Processing) | 2016

Attraction and Similarity-Based Interference in Object Gender Agreement

Sandra Villata; Julie Franck


Archive | 2015

Processing and grammar constraints in extraction from wh-islands

Sandra Villata; Julie Franck


Archive | 2015

Intervention effects in wh-islands: an eye-tracking study

Sandra Villata; Paolo Canal; Julie Franck; Andrea Moro; Cristiano Chesi


Bollettino della Società di linguistica italiana | 2015

The Complex Case of Weak Islands

Sandra Villata; Julie Franck


Archive | 2014

Relativized minimality : A systematic investigation on intervention effects

Sandra Villata; Luigi Rizzi; Akira Omaki; Julie Franck


Archive | 2014

Temporal Dynamics of Extraction From Wh-Islands: A Speed-Accuracy Trade-Off Study

Sandra Villata; Brian McElree; Julie Franck

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Akira Omaki

Johns Hopkins University

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Whitney Tabor

University of Connecticut

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Andrea Moro

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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