Distributive ignorance inferences with wonder and believe. Cremers, A., Roelofsen, F., & Uegaki, W. To appear in Semantics and Pragmatics, 2018. Paper abstract bibtex A sentence like Mary wonders whether Ann, Bill or Carol broke the vase implies that Mary still considers all disjuncts possible. This inference has been referred to as a distributive ignorance inference (Roelofsen & Uegaki 2016). We present two experiments examining the distributive ignorance inferences triggered by two verbs, wonder and believe, with different types of complements and different types of subjects. The results of these experiments show that the distributive ignorance inferences triggered by the two verbs pattern very much alike. We argue that the data are best explained by an account that involves a strengthening mechanism which is sensitive to the syntactic structure of the complement of the verbs involved and optionally applies locally, as part of the semantic composition process.
@article{CremersRoelofsenUegaki:18,
Abstract = {A sentence like Mary wonders whether Ann, Bill or Carol broke the
vase implies that Mary still considers all disjuncts possible. This inference has been
referred to as a distributive ignorance inference (Roelofsen & Uegaki 2016). We
present two experiments examining the distributive ignorance inferences triggered
by two verbs, wonder and believe, with different types of complements and different
types of subjects.
The results of these experiments show that the distributive ignorance inferences
triggered by the two verbs pattern very much alike. We argue that the data are best
explained by an account that involves a strengthening mechanism which is sensitive
to the syntactic structure of the complement of the verbs involved and optionally
applies locally, as part of the semantic composition process.},
Author = {Cremers, Alexandre and Roelofsen, Floris and Uegaki, Wataru},
Date-Modified = {2019-05-09 21:54:21 +0200},
Journal = {To appear in Semantics and Pragmatics},
Keywords = {inquisitive semantics,theoretical linguistics,modality,questions,ignorance,experimental linguistics,exhaustivity,implicatures,in press},
Mendeley-Tags = {inquisitive semantics,theoretical linguistics},
Title = {Distributive ignorance inferences with wonder and believe},
Url = {https://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/TdhYjRiM/paper.pdf},
Year = {2018},
Bdsk-Url-1 = {https://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/TdhYjRiM/paper.pdf}}
Downloads: 0
{"_id":"v9S9r3PYma7dEgtDX","bibbaseid":"cremers-roelofsen-uegaki-distributiveignoranceinferenceswithwonderandbelieve-2018","authorIDs":["5ccde963f0cf1ada0100029b"],"author_short":["Cremers, A.","Roelofsen, F.","Uegaki, W."],"bibdata":{"bibtype":"article","type":"article","abstract":"A sentence like Mary wonders whether Ann, Bill or Carol broke the vase implies that Mary still considers all disjuncts possible. This inference has been referred to as a distributive ignorance inference (Roelofsen & Uegaki 2016). We present two experiments examining the distributive ignorance inferences triggered by two verbs, wonder and believe, with different types of complements and different types of subjects. The results of these experiments show that the distributive ignorance inferences triggered by the two verbs pattern very much alike. We argue that the data are best explained by an account that involves a strengthening mechanism which is sensitive to the syntactic structure of the complement of the verbs involved and optionally applies locally, as part of the semantic composition process.","author":[{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Cremers"],"firstnames":["Alexandre"],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Roelofsen"],"firstnames":["Floris"],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Uegaki"],"firstnames":["Wataru"],"suffixes":[]}],"date-modified":"2019-05-09 21:54:21 +0200","journal":"To appear in Semantics and Pragmatics","keywords":"inquisitive semantics,theoretical linguistics,modality,questions,ignorance,experimental linguistics,exhaustivity,implicatures,in press","mendeley-tags":"inquisitive semantics,theoretical linguistics","title":"Distributive ignorance inferences with wonder and believe","url":"https://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/TdhYjRiM/paper.pdf","year":"2018","bdsk-url-1":"https://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/TdhYjRiM/paper.pdf","bibtex":"@article{CremersRoelofsenUegaki:18,\n\tAbstract = {A sentence like Mary wonders whether Ann, Bill or Carol broke the\nvase implies that Mary still considers all disjuncts possible. This inference has been\nreferred to as a distributive ignorance inference (Roelofsen & Uegaki 2016). We\npresent two experiments examining the distributive ignorance inferences triggered\nby two verbs, wonder and believe, with different types of complements and different\ntypes of subjects.\n\nThe results of these experiments show that the distributive ignorance inferences\ntriggered by the two verbs pattern very much alike. We argue that the data are best\nexplained by an account that involves a strengthening mechanism which is sensitive\nto the syntactic structure of the complement of the verbs involved and optionally\napplies locally, as part of the semantic composition process.},\n\tAuthor = {Cremers, Alexandre and Roelofsen, Floris and Uegaki, Wataru},\n\tDate-Modified = {2019-05-09 21:54:21 +0200},\n\tJournal = {To appear in Semantics and Pragmatics},\n\tKeywords = {inquisitive semantics,theoretical linguistics,modality,questions,ignorance,experimental linguistics,exhaustivity,implicatures,in press},\n\tMendeley-Tags = {inquisitive semantics,theoretical linguistics},\n\tTitle = {Distributive ignorance inferences with wonder and believe},\n\tUrl = {https://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/TdhYjRiM/paper.pdf},\n\tYear = {2018},\n\tBdsk-Url-1 = {https://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/TdhYjRiM/paper.pdf}}\n\n","author_short":["Cremers, A.","Roelofsen, F.","Uegaki, W."],"key":"CremersRoelofsenUegaki:18","id":"CremersRoelofsenUegaki:18","bibbaseid":"cremers-roelofsen-uegaki-distributiveignoranceinferenceswithwonderandbelieve-2018","role":"author","urls":{"Paper":"https://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/TdhYjRiM/paper.pdf"},"keyword":["inquisitive semantics","theoretical linguistics","modality","questions","ignorance","experimental linguistics","exhaustivity","implicatures","in press"],"downloads":0,"html":""},"bibtype":"article","biburl":"http://froelofs.github.io/bib/floris33.bib","creationDate":"2019-05-08T11:31:41.425Z","downloads":0,"keywords":["inquisitive semantics","theoretical linguistics","modality","questions","ignorance","disjunction","experimental linguistics","exhaustivity","implicatures","in press"],"search_terms":["distributive","ignorance","inferences","wonder","believe","cremers","roelofsen","uegaki"],"title":"Distributive ignorance inferences with wonder and believe","year":2018,"dataSources":["KNNrYeW6Pk6jCaLk8"]}