72 results match your criteria: "Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics Nijmegen[Affiliation]"

Animal vocal communication often relies on call sequences. The temporal patterns of such sequences can be adjusted to other callers, follow complex rhythmic structures or exhibit a metronome-like pattern (i.e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The research investigates how environmental factors influence species diversity in tropical ecosystems, focusing on the isolated herpetofauna of Amber Mountain in Madagascar.
  • The study found a peak in species richness at around 1000 meters above sea level, with a significant number of local endemic species appearing at higher elevations.
  • Genetic analysis of chameleons and frogs revealed patterns of divergence with altitude, suggesting that both ecological and geographical factors contribute to speciation processes in Madagascar's unique biodiversity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The ability to control one's vocal production is a major advantage in acoustic communication. Yet, not all species have the same level of control over their vocal output. Several bird species can interrupt their song upon hearing an external stimulus, but there is no evidence how flexible this behavior is.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Event-related potentials (ERPs) provide a window into how the brain is processing language. Here, we propose a theory that argues that ERPs such as the N400 and P600 arise as side effects of an error-based learning mechanism that explains linguistic adaptation and language learning. We instantiated this theory in a connectionist model that can simulate data from three studies on the N400 (amplitude modulation by expectancy, contextual constraint, and sentence position), five studies on the P600 (agreement, tense, word category, subcategorization and garden-path sentences), and a study on the semantic P600 in role reversal anomalies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Nativist theories have argued that language involves syntactic principles which are unlearnable from the input children receive. A paradigm case of these innate principles is the structure dependence of auxiliary inversion in complex polar questions (Chomsky, 1968, 1975, 1980). Computational approaches have focused on the properties of the input in explaining how children acquire these questions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Timing of Utterance Planning in Task-Oriented Dialogue: Evidence from a Novel List-Completion Paradigm.

Front Psychol

December 2016

Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud UniversityNijmegen, Netherlands; Psychology of Language Department, Max Planck Institute for PsycholinguisticsNijmegen, Netherlands.

In conversation, interlocutors rarely leave long gaps between turns, suggesting that next speakers begin to plan their turns while listening to the previous speaker. The present experiment used analyses of speech onset latencies and eye-movements in a task-oriented dialogue paradigm to investigate when speakers start planning their responses. German speakers heard a confederate describe sets of objects in utterances that either ended in a noun [e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This and That Revisited: A Social and Multimodal Approach to Spatial Demonstratives.

Front Psychol

February 2016

Neurobiology of Language Department, Max Planck Institute for PsycholinguisticsNijmegen, Netherlands; Centre for Language Studies, Radboud UniversityNijmegen, Netherlands.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Retinoic Acid Signaling: A New Piece in the Spoken Language Puzzle.

Front Psychol

December 2015

Department of Language and Genetics, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics Nijmegen, Netherlands ; Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University Nijmegen, Netherlands.

Article Synopsis
  • Speech involves complex motor control, coordinated by neural circuits like cortico-striato-thalamic loops, allowing most people to speak effortlessly.
  • FOXP2 is a key gene linked to speech and language disorders, where mutations lead to significant communication impairments, highlighting its role in speech-motor control mechanisms.
  • Recent findings suggest that FOXP2 interacts with retinoic acid (RA) signaling, which impacts brain development and may be crucial for fine motor skills and speech production, providing new avenues for research into the genetics of language readiness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

'Right Now, Sophie (∗)Swims in the Pool?!': Brain Potentials of Grammatical Aspect Processing.

Front Psychol

December 2015

Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Centre for Cognition, Radboud University Nijmegen, Netherlands.

We investigated whether brain potentials of grammatical aspect processing resemble semantic or morpho-syntactic processing, or whether they instead are characterized by an entirely distinct pattern in the same individuals. We studied aspect from the perspective of agreement between the temporal information in the context (temporal adverbials, e.g.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The rates of overspecification of color, pattern, and size are compared, to investigate how salience and absoluteness contribute to the production of overspecification. Color and pattern are absolute and salient attributes, whereas size is relative and less salient. Additionally, a tendency toward consistent responses is assessed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In order to make sense of the world, humans tend to see causation almost everywhere. Although most causal relations may seem straightforward, they are not always construed in the same way cross-culturally. In this study, we investigate concepts of "chance," "coincidence," or "randomness" that refer to assumed relations between intention, action, and outcome in situations, and we ask how people from different cultures make sense of such non-law-like connections.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To accomplish a smooth transition in conversation from one speaker to the next, a tight coordination of interaction between speakers is required. Recent studies of adult conversation suggest that this close timing of interaction may well be a universal feature of conversation. In the present paper, we set out to assess the development of this close timing of turns in infancy in vocal exchanges between mothers and infants.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Suspending the next turn as a form of repair initiation: evidence from Argentine Sign Language.

Front Psychol

October 2015

Language and Cognition Department, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics Nijmegen, Netherlands ; Department of Linguistics, The University of Sydney Sydney, NSW, Australia.

Practices of other-initiated repair deal with problems of hearing or understanding what another person has said in the fast-moving turn-by-turn flow of conversation. As such, other-initiated repair plays a fundamental role in the maintenance of intersubjectivity in social interaction. This study finds and analyses a special type of other-initiated repair that is used in turn-by-turn conversation in a sign language: Argentine Sign Language (Lengua de Señas Argentina or LSA).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The core niche for language use is in verbal interaction, involving the rapid exchange of turns at talking. This paper reviews the extensive literature about this system, adding new statistical analyses of behavioral data where they have been missing, demonstrating that turn-taking has the systematic properties originally noted by Sacks et al. (1974; hereafter SSJ).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The timing of turn taking in conversation is extremely rapid given the cognitive demands on speakers to comprehend, plan and execute turns in real time. Findings from psycholinguistics predict that the timing of turn taking is influenced by demands on processing, such as word frequency or syntactic complexity. An alternative view comes from the field of conversation analysis, which predicts that the rules of turn-taking and sequence organization may dictate the variation in gap durations (e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Adults achieve successful coordination during conversation by using prosodic and lexicosyntactic cues to predict upcoming changes in speakership. We examined the relative weight of these linguistic cues in the prediction of upcoming turn structure by toddlers learning Dutch (Experiment 1; N = 21) and British English (Experiment 2; N = 20) and adult control participants (Dutch: N = 16; English: N = 20). We tracked participants' anticipatory eye movements as they watched videos of dyadic puppet conversation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Breathing for answering: the time course of response planning in conversation.

Front Psychol

March 2015

Language and Cognition Department, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics Nijmegen, Netherlands ; Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University Nijmegen, Netherlands.

We investigate the timing of pre-answer inbreaths in order to shed light on the time course of response planning and execution in conversational turn-taking. Using acoustic and inductive plethysmography recordings of seven dyadic conversations in Dutch, we show that pre-answer inbreaths in conversation typically begin briefly after the end of questions. We also show that the presence of a pre-answer inbreath usually co-occurs with substantially delayed answers, with a modal latency of 576 vs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This study investigated whether the negative effect of complexity on artificial grammar learning could be compensated by adding semantics. Participants were exposed to exemplars from a simple or a complex finite state grammar presented with or without a semantic reference field. As expected, performance on a grammaticality judgment test was higher for the simple grammar than for the complex grammar.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

One of the most intriguing aspects of human communication is its turn-taking system. It requires the ability to process on-going turns at talk while planning the next, and to launch this next turn without considerable overlap or delay. Recent research has investigated the eye movements of observers of dialogs to gain insight into how we process turns at talk.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Comprehending non-native speakers: theory and evidence for adjustment in manner of processing.

Front Psychol

February 2015

Department of Psychology, University of Chicago Chicago, IL, USA ; Psychology of Language Department, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics Nijmegen, Netherlands.

Non-native speakers have lower linguistic competence than native speakers, which renders their language less reliable in conveying their intentions. We suggest that expectations of lower competence lead listeners to adapt their manner of processing when they listen to non-native speakers. We propose that listeners use cognitive resources to adjust by increasing their reliance on top-down processes and extracting less information from the language of the non-native speaker.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF