Psych. of Language: Exam 3
"Peter owned a house. The plumbing was blocked." We need to make a ___________ inference, to understand that the blocked plumbing mentioned in the second sentence refers to Peters' house mentioned in the first sentence.
Bridging
The statement "Could you close the window?" falls into which speed act category?
Directives
T/F: According to Caramazza's (1997) independent network theory, we need to access information regarding a word's syntactic properties in order to access information regarding its phonological form.
False
T/F: Collins and Loftus modified the original semantic network model of Collins and Quillian to satisfy some of the criticisms of the original model. One of the strengths of Collins and Loftus model is that it is powerful enough to explain just about any result
False
Locutionary force
Literal meaning of an utterance
Extension
Object in the word to which a particular word refers to
The effect of an utterance on a listener is known as
Perlocutionary force
Identification Procedures
Procedures used for identifying members of a category
Try to be as informative as you possibly can, and give as much information as is needed, and no more. This is the maxim of:
Quantity
A woman asks her husband, "Do you think this dress makes me look fat?" He responds "What time are we going to the theatre?" His answer violates the maxim of:
Relevance
Which hypothesis states that things in the common ground should be more accessible than things that are not in the common ground?
Restricted search
This model of text processing assumes that meaning of a text represented terms of propositions that are connected together in memory
The Propositional Network Moel
Audience Design
The idea that speakers tailor their productions to address the specific needs of their listeners
Prototypicality Effect
Typical instances of a concept are verified faster than atypical instances
Which of the following models better accounts for how we process and understand texts? A) Mental Model B) Propositional Network Model C) Construction- Integration Model D) Story Grammars
C) Construction- Integration Model
Semantic memory is organized to avoid excessive duplication (or repetition of information). This principle is known as:
Cognitive economy
One of the key properties of the __________ approach is that a specific concept is represented by activity that is distributed over many units in the network
Connectionist
Episodic
Memory for personally experienced events
Question-answer pairs, greeting-greeting pairs, and offer-acceptance pairs make turn structure explicit. These are known as:
Adjacency pairs
Prototype
An abstraction that is the best example of a category
Idiom
An expression particular to a language, whose meaning cannot be derived from its parts (e.g., "kick the bucket")
We are eating dinner and I ask you; "Is the salt at your end of the table?" when in fact I can see it is, and I am really asking you to pass me the salt. This is an example of:
An indirect speech act
Implicature
An inference that we make in conversation to maintain the sense and relevance of the conversation
Speech act
An utterance defined in terms of the intentions of the speaker and the effect that they have on the listener
Tailoring our utterances to suit the communicative needs of our conversational partners is known as:
Audience Design
Which of the following statements is FALSE regarding Garrett's model of speech production? A) The two main levels of syntactic planning are: The functional and positional levels B) Function words are selected before content words C) There is no interaction among the levels D) All the above
B) Function words are selected before content words
According to the Collins and Quillian model, which of the following sentences should be responded to the fastest during a sentence verification task? A) A canary is an animal B) A canary is a bird C) A canary is a canary D) None of the above
C) A canary is a canary
Which of the following statements is FALSE about concepts A) Concepts can be concrete or abstract B) Concepts refer to categories C) A concept is always captured in a single word D) Concepts relate to other concepts
C) A concept is always captured in a single word
Which of the following statements is TRUE regarding discrete processing: A) Stage 1 and Stage 2 of lexicalization interact B) The phonological units of both the target word and of words semantically related to the target word are activated C) The phonological units of only the target word are activated
C) The phonological units of only the target word are activated
According to the __________ when processing a text, a reader integrates the information contained in the text with previous knowledge and experiences
Construction- Integration Model
Which of the following statements is TRUE regarding memory for text A) We remember the gist of a text, but rapidly forget details regarding word order B) Information that is personally relevant is remembered better than information that is not personally relevant C) Prior knowledge about a topic improves our memory for a text or story about that topic D) All the above
D) All the above
Which of the following processes of speech production involves determining what to say? A) Formulation B) Syntactic Planning C) Articulation D) Conceptualization
D) Conceptualization
According to the Lemma Theory, which of the following specifies the syntactic properties of a word, such as gender and grammatical class A) Phonological encoding B) Affixes C) Lexemes D) Lemmas
D) Lemmas
___________ state that the meaning of a word in semantic memory is represented by a set of semantic features or attributes
Decompositional Theories
Defining
Features shared by all instances of a category
Characteristic
Features shared by many but not by all instances of a category
An utterance, such as "I hereby pronounce you man and wife," would be _______________ if the person who pronounce it has the authority to perform marriages
Felicitous
According to Garrett's model of speech production, at which of the following levels is word order not yet explicitly represented, but the semantic content of words is specified and assigned to syntactic roles such as subject and object?
Functional
Cognitive Economy
Information that is stored at one level of the hierarchy is not repeated at other levels
We store a representation of each instance we have previously encountered. Category membership depends on the similarity between a particular entity and the stored instances. This is the:
Instance (exemplar) theory
Illocutionary force
It refers to what a speaker is trying to get done with the utterance
The Study of pragmatics looks at:
Language use, and how we deal with those aspects of language that go beyond the simple meaning of what we hear and say
The tendency for phonological speech errors to result in words rather in non-words is called
Lexical bias
The process in speech production whereby we translate a semantic representation of a content word into its phonological representation of form is called:
Lexicalization
Property Inheritance
Lower level concept nodes share properties of higher level concept nodes
Semantic
Memory for the long-term storage of facts (Paris is the capitol of France)
Which hypothesis states that when we are reading a text only a limited number of elaborative inferences are drawn automatically?
Minimalist
Semantic Primitives
Semantic features that represent the meaning of all words
The following statement represents what kind of memory? "Paris is the capitol of France"
Semantic memory
Intension
Sense of a word
The intention of a word is to _______ as the extension of a words is to _________
Sense; reference
Commissives
Speech acts in which the speaker commits him or herself to doing something in the future
Expressives
Speech acts in which the speaker expresses how she/he feels about the situation
Representatives
Speech acts in which the speaker is asserting a fact (that something is the case)
Directives
Speech acts in which the speaker try to make the listener perform an action
Performative Verbs
Verbs whose action is carried out by simply pronouncing them
The Maxim of Quality
Were one tries to be truthful, and does not give information that is false or that is not supported by evidence
Spreading Activation
When a concept is activated, activation spreads out through the semantic network
The Maxim of Manner
When one tries to be as clear, as brief, and as orderly as one can in what one says, and where one avoids obscurity and ambiguity
Saying "Guess whose mind came to name" instead of "Guess whose name come to mind" is an example of what kind of speech error:
Word exchange
In the following passage "Greg was anxious to get to the music store. He wanted to buy a CD". The expression "He" is the ______________ and "Greg" is the _______________
anaphor; antecedent
When two or more linguistic expressions refer to the same thing, we are talking about:
co-reference
Vehicle
the second term of a metaphor
Conversational maxim
A rule that helps us to make sense of conversation
Metaphor
A figure of speech that works by association, comparison, or resemblance
Figurative
non-literal speech
According to the Feature-Comparison Model, a "A robin is a bird" would be verified faster than "A penguin is a bird" because
"A penguin is a bird" requires a second stage of processing in which the defining features of "penguin" and "bird" are compared
The statement "Susan is a widow", enables us to infer that Susan is female. This is called:
A logical inference
Basic
The default or preferred level of categorization (e.g., "dog" rather than "terrier" or "animal")
Perlocutionary Force
The effects of the utterance on the listener
You know that you know a word, but you cannot immediately retrieve it. This is called:
Tip-of-the-tongue
During conversation, a change of speaker occurs at the:
Transition relevance place