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    <rdf:Description rdf:about="https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2969262">
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        <dc:title>An interference account of the missing-VP effect</dc:title>
        <bibo:authorList rdf:parseType="Collection">
            <foaf:Person rdf:about="https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/person/145199264">
                <foaf:name>Häussler, Jana</foaf:name>
                <foaf:surname>Häussler</foaf:surname>
                <foaf:givenname>Jana</foaf:givenname>
            </foaf:Person>
            <foaf:Person>
                <foaf:name>Bader, Markus</foaf:name>
                <foaf:surname>Bader</foaf:surname>
                <foaf:givenname>Markus</foaf:givenname>
            </foaf:Person>
        </bibo:authorList>
        <bibo:abstract>Sentences with doubly center-embedded relative clauses in which a verb phrase (VP) is missing are sometimes perceived as grammatical, thus giving rise to an illusion of grammaticality. In this paper, we provide a new account of why missing-VP sentences, which are both complex and ungrammatical, lead to an illusion of grammaticality, the so-called missing-VP effect. We propose that the missing-VP effect in particular, and processing difficulties with multiply center-embedded clauses more generally, are best understood as resulting from interference during cue-based retrieval. When processing a sentence with double center-embedding, a retrieval error due to interference can cause the verb of an embedded clause to be erroneously attached into a higher clause. This can lead to an illusion of grammaticality in the case of missing-VP sentences and to processing complexity in the case of complete sentences with double center-embedding. Evidence for an interference account of the missing-VP effect comes from experiments that have investigated the missing-VP effect in German using a speeded grammaticality judgments procedure. We review this evidence and then present two new experiments that show that the missing-VP effect can be found in German also with less restricting procedures. One experiment was a questionnaire study which required grammaticality judgments from participants without imposing any time constraints. The second experiment used a self-paced reading procedure and did not require any judgments. Both experiments confirm the prior findings of missing-VP effects in German and also show that the missing-VP effect is subject to a primacy effect as known from the memory literature. Based on this evidence, we argue that an account of missing-VP effects in terms of interference during cue-based retrieval is superior to accounts in terms of limited memory resources or in terms of experience with embedded structures.</bibo:abstract>
        <bibo:volume>6</bibo:volume>
        <dc:publisher>Frontiers Research Foundation</dc:publisher>
        <fabio:hasPublishingYear>2015</fabio:hasPublishingYear>
        <dc:isPartOf rdf:resource="urn:issn:1664-1078"/>
        <bibo:doi rdf:resource="10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00766" />
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