Discourse and Inference
Chapter 11: Discourse and Inference
11.1 From Linguistic Form to Mental Models of the World
- What do sentence meanings look like?
- What information do mental models contain?
- Researchers at Work 11.1: Probing for the contents of mental models
- Box 11.1: Individual differences in visual imagery during reading
- Method 11.1: Converging techniques for studying mental models
- What information “sticks” in memory?
- The importance of background knowledge
- Language at Large 11.1: What does it mean to be literate?
- 11.1 Questions to Contemplate
11.2 Pronoun Problems
- Box 11.2: Pronoun systems across languages
- How do we resolve the meanings of pronouns?
- What makes some discourse referents more salient than others?
- The repeated-name penalty
- Where’s this going?
- 11.2 Questions to Contemplate
11.3 Pronouns in Real Time
- Coordinating multiple sources of information
- Pronoun resolution by children
- Box 11.3: Pronoun types and structural constraints
- 11.3 Questions to Contemplate
11.4 Drawing Inferences and Making Connections
- Bridging inferences
- Language at Large 11.2: The Kuleshov effect: How inferences bring life to film
- Presuppositions
- Elaborative inferences
- Box 11.4: Using brain waves to study the time course of discourse processing
- The cognitive costs of elaborative inferences
- 11.4 Questions to Contemplate
11.5 Understanding Metaphor
- Does metaphor rise from the ashes of literal meaning?
- How are metaphorical meanings computed?
- Language at Large 11.3: The use and abuse of metaphor
- What skills are needed to understand metaphor?
- 11.5 Questions to Contemplate
- Digging Deeper: Shallow processors of builders of rich meaning?
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