Journal articles

Pragmatic constraints do not prevent the co-activation of alternative names: Evidence from sequential naming tasks with one and two speakers

Authors

Mädebach, Andreas; Kurtz, Franziska; Schriefers, Herbert; Jescheniak, Jörg D.

UPF authors

Type

Articles de recerca

Journal title

Language, Cognition and Neuroscience

Publication year

2020

Volume

35

Number

8

Pages

1073-1088

ISSN

2327-3798

Publication State

Publicat

Abstract

We investigated whether the phonological co-activation of alternative names in picture naming (e.g. ¿fish¿ for target ¿shark¿) is reduced by contextual constraints which render them inappropriate. In the constraining context, the target naming response was preceded by a naming response to an object from the same category (e.g. an eel) which remained visible during target naming. Therefore, use of the alternative target name ¿fish¿ would result (a) in an ambiguous response because of the visual context and (b) in a pragmatically odd response because of the previous naming response. In Experiment 1 the context pictures were named by the participants themselves and in Experiment 2 by a communication partner. In both experiments, interference from distractor words phonologically related (¿finger¿) versus unrelated (¿book¿) to the alternative name was observed regardless of context. This finding indicates limited flexibility in lexical activation during speech planning.

Complete citation

Mädebach, Andreas; Kurtz, Franziska; Schriefers, Herbert; Jescheniak, Jörg D.. Pragmatic constraints do not prevent the co-activation of alternative names: Evidence from sequential naming tasks with one and two speakers. Language, Cognition and Neuroscience 2020; 35(8): 1073-1088.

Related projects

Speaking in context: Linguistic and visual context effects on lexical activation patterns in speech production. Sin Director , o Avalador (IP). -. German Research Foundation (DFG) 2015 - 2015

Bibliometric indicators

3 times cited

4 times cited

CiteScore

3.6 (2020)

Index Scimago: 1.128 (2020)

HSJR index

79.0 (2020)

SJR quartile

Q1 (2018)

SJR area

Experimental and Cognitive Psychology (Q1); Language and Linguistics (Q1); Linguistics and Language (Q1); Cognitive Neuroscience (Q2) (2018)