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Subject: COG SCI SPEAKER: "INTERACTION IN LANGUAGE PROCESSING"
Date: Mon, 1 Mar 2004 12:06:26 -0500 (EST)
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Subject: COG SCI SPEAKER: "INTERACTION IN LANGUAGE PROCESSING"
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This week's CogSci speaker's topic is (spoken) word recognition,
including the recognition of novel words.  It may be tangentially
relevant to CVA; come and find out :-)


                     CENTER FOR COGNITIVE SCIENCE
         University at Buffalo, State University of New York

                       Wednesday, March 3, 2004
                          2:00 pm - 4:00 pm
                     280 Park Hall, North Campus


                         James Magnuson, Ph.D
                       Department of Psychology
                         Columbia University

                 "Interaction in language processing:
               Pragmatic constraints on lexical access"


Everyday language use is rich and textured. Conventional
psycholinguistic laboratory tasks abstract away from natural
complexity in order to isolate information relevant at different levels of
linguistic description. Such simplifications reduce language use to
smaller, tractable problems, and allow fine-grained chronometric
processing measures. I argue that this approach paradoxically
overestimates the complexity and modularity of language processing,
as natural contexts provide layers of constraints that reduce the
burden on bottom-up and within-level processing.

I will address two primary issues. The first is how we can study
language in naturalistic contexts without sacrificing fine-grained
measures and precise stimulus control. I will describe an eye tracking
measure that is closely time-locked to spoken instructions in
naturalistic tasks and that can be transparently linked to
computational models, and an artificial lexicon paradigm that provides
precise control over lexical characteristics. I will discuss how we have
used both techniques to address debates in adult and developmental
word recognition.

The second issue is whether lexical access - a process typically assumed
to be encapsulated from higher levels of linguistic representation - is
constrained by pragmatic context. Subjects learned to recognize an
artificial lexicon of names of novel objects ("nouns") and textures that
could be applied to them ("adjectives"). Each word had phonological
competitors in both form classes. We compared competition effects given
visual displays that required adjective use or made adjectives infelicitous.
Consistent with the hypothesis that language processing makes use of
reliable contextual constraints, we found an immediate impact of
pragmatic visual cues: similar-sounding words competed when they were
from the same class, but not when they were from different classes. This
result adds to growing evidence that language processing is highly
interactive, and the approach provides a foundation for the development
of integrated theories of language use in natural contexts.

A hardcopy of this announcement can be accessed here:
http://www.cogsci.buffalo.edu/Activities/Colloquium/CLLQs04/magnusonannounce.pdf
Please print it out and post it in your department.


        This event is co-sponsored by the Language Perception Laboratory




                     Center for Cognitive Science
         University at Buffalo, State University of New York
                  652 Baldy Hall, Buffalo, NY 14260
              Phone: (716) 645-2177 ext. 717, Fax: (716) 645-3825
                Email: ccs-cogsci-contact@buffalo.edu
http://www.cogsci.buffalo.edu/Activities/Colloquium/CLLQs04/2004spring.htm


     All Center for Cognitive Science Events are sponsored by the
              Office of the Vice President for Research
                        University at Buffalo
                     State University of New York




Heike Jones
Center for Cognitive Science
University at Buffalo
652 Baldy Hall
Buffalo, NY 14260
P: (716) 645-2177 ext. 717
F: (716) 645-3825
Email: ccs-cogsci-contact@buffalo.edu
URL: http://www.cogsci.buffalo.edu

