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  1. Literalism in Autistic People: a Predictive Processing Proposal.Agustín Vicente, Christian Michel & Valentina Petrolini - forthcoming - Review of Philosophy and Psychology:1-24.
    Autistic individuals are commonly said – and also consider themselves – to be excessively literalist, in the sense that they tend to prefer literal interpretations of words and utterances. This literalist bias seems to be fairly specific to autism and still lacks a convincing explanation. In this paper we explore a novel hypothesis that has the potential to account for the literalist bias in autism. We argue that literalism results from an atypical functioning of the predictive system: specifically, an atypical (...)
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  • Rational Sentence Interpretation in Mandarin Chinese.Meilin Zhan, Sihan Chen, Roger Levy, Jiayi Lu & Edward Gibson - 2023 - Cognitive Science 47 (12):e13383.
    Previous work has shown that English native speakers interpret sentences as predicted by a noisy‐channel model: They integrate both the real‐world plausibility of the meaning—the prior—and the likelihood that the intended sentence may be corrupted into the perceived sentence. In this study, we test the noisy‐channel model in Mandarin Chinese, a language taxonomically different from English. We present native Mandarin speakers sentences in a written modality (Experiment 1) and an auditory modality (Experiment 2) in three pairs of syntactic alternations. The (...)
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  • The effect of context on noisy-channel sentence comprehension.Sihan Chen, Sarah Nathaniel, Rachel Ryskin & Edward Gibson - 2023 - Cognition 238 (C):105503.
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