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      Behind the Mexican Mountains: Recent Developments and New Directions in Research on Uto-Aztecan Languages : New Research on Uto-Aztecan Languages

      Language and Linguistics Compass
      Wiley-Blackwell

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          The diffusion of maize to the southwestern United States and its impact

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            Proto-Uto-Aztecan: A Community of Cultivators in Central Mexico?

            Jane Hill (2001)
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              Cue-dependent interference in comprehension.

              The role of interference as a primary determinant of forgetting in memory has long been accepted, however its role as a contributor to poor comprehension is just beginning to be understood. The current paper reports two studies, in which speed-accuracy tradeoff and eye-tracking methodologies were used with the same materials to provide converging evidence for the role of syntactic and semantic cues as mediators of both proactive (PI) and retroactive interference (RI) during comprehension. Consistent with previous work (e.g., Van Dyke & Lewis, 2003), we found that syntactic constraints at the retrieval site are among the cues that drive retrieval in comprehension, and that these constraints effectively limit interference from potential distractors with semantic/pragmatic properties in common with the target constituent. The data are discussed in terms of a cue-overload account, in which interference both arises from and is mediated through a direct-access retrieval mechanism that utilizes a linear, weighted cue-combinatoric scheme.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Language and Linguistics Compass
                Wiley-Blackwell
                1749818X
                July 2011
                July 2011
                : 5
                : 7
                : 485-504
                Article
                10.1111/j.1749-818X.2011.00287.x
                ec5a9e20-76fc-4224-96ae-f17ed658517d
                © 2011

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1

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