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1731.
Pseudopartitives, measures and agreement: an experimental study
Greta Mazzaggio, Maria Rita Manzini, invited lecture at foreign university

Keywords: pseudopartitives, agreement, agreement attraction, italian, psycholinguistics
Published in RUNG: 22.09.2021; Views: 1816; Downloads: 0
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1732.
Variazioni lessicali e di registro nella comunicazione lavorativa
Greta Mazzaggio, invited lecture at foreign university

Keywords: lexicon variation, communication
Published in RUNG: 22.09.2021; Views: 1703; Downloads: 0
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1733.
"No Pun Intended": the Comprehension of Irony and Implicatures in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders.
Greta Mazzaggio, invited lecture at foreign university

Keywords: Autism Spectrum Disorders, irony
Published in RUNG: 22.09.2021; Views: 1676; Downloads: 0
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1734.
Reading Between the Lines: Conversational Implicature and their context of usage
Greta Mazzaggio, invited lecture at foreign university

Keywords: implicatures, pragmatics
Published in RUNG: 22.09.2021; Views: 1680; Downloads: 0
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1735.
Autism Spectrum Disorder and pragmatic comprehension
Greta Mazzaggio, invited lecture at foreign university

Keywords: autism, pragmatics
Published in RUNG: 22.09.2021; Views: 1728; Downloads: 0
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1736.
Atypical processing in Pragmatics: the case of irony.
Greta Mazzaggio, invited lecture at foreign university

Keywords: Autism, pragmatics, irony
Published in RUNG: 22.09.2021; Views: 1676; Downloads: 0
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1737.
The computation of some (but not all) implicatures.
Greta Mazzaggio, invited lecture at foreign university

Keywords: scalar implicatures
Published in RUNG: 22.09.2021; Views: 1680; Downloads: 0
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1738.
Understanding indirect requests for information in high-functioning autism
Eleonora Marocchini, Simona Di Paola, Greta Mazzaggio, Filippo Domaneschi, 2022, original scientific article

Abstract: Few works have addressed the processing of indirect requests in High-Functioning Autism (HFA), and results are conflicting. Some studies report HFA individuals’ difficulties in indirect requests comprehension; others suggest that it might be preserved in HFA. Furthermore, the role of Theory of Mind in understanding indirect requests is an open issue. The goal of this work is twofold: first, assessing whether comprehension of indirect requests for information is preserved in HFA; second, exploring whether mind-reading skills predict this ability. We tested a group of (n = 14; 9–12 years) HFA children and two groups of younger (n = 19; 5–6 years) and older (n = 28; 9–12 years) typically developing (TD) children in a semi-structured task involving direct, indirect and highly indirect requests for information. Results suggested that HFA can understand indirect and highly indirect requests, as well as TD children. Yet, while Theory of Mind skills seem to enhance older TD children understanding, this is not the case for HFA children. Therefore, interestingly, they could rely on different interpretative strategies.
Keywords: autism, indirect requests, speech acts, pragamtics
Published in RUNG: 22.09.2021; Views: 1687; Downloads: 0
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1739.
On the cost of scalar implicaures.
Greta Mazzaggio, invited lecture at foreign university

Keywords: scalar implicatures, cognitive cost, pragmatics, experimental pragmatics
Published in RUNG: 22.09.2021; Views: 1706; Downloads: 0
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1740.
Addressing the debate on pronoun reversal, caused by Theory of Mind or by Echolalia?
Greta Mazzaggio, invited lecture at foreign university

Abstract: Pronoun reversal is among the most interesting errors of early child language. It mainly consists in the substitution of I for you, and you for I; during these years, such reversal has often been associated mainly with Autistic Spectrum Disorder but recent studies have shown that the phenomena also occur in typically developing children with almost the same frequency (Evans, K.E., Demuth, K., 2012). Many theories on the cause of pronoun reversals have been proposed but the problem remains puzzling because a lot of children who reverse pronouns occasionally produce also correct forms. Moreover, it is a phenomenon which is not present in all the children (Dale, P.S., Crain- Thoreson, C., 1993). Of the two of the main hyphoteses related to pronoun reversal, one links it to a lack of a Theory of Mind (ToM), another relates it to echolalia. Based on two different surveys I conducted, I would like to address the debate. With the first study I wanted to verify whether pronoun reversals is related to a lack or to a non- mature development of ToM (Wechsler, S., 2010) testing a group of typically developing children with a series of ToM tasks ordered by a degree of complexity, from less to more complex. Then I created four tasks to verify their competence in using pronouns: focus position, pronoun with verb agreement, null form and pronouns other than first and second singular forms. We administered this experiment to a group of 17 Italian children - 38 to 70 months of age - because such tasks have never been performed before for Italian language. In this respect, Italian is more complex than English, mainly for two aspects: it’s a pro-drop language, that is a language in which some pronouns can be omitted if they are pragmatically inferable, and there is agreement between the subject pronoun and the verb, which is another factor that we must take into account. With the second study I analysed spontaneous speech uttered by a 15-years-old boy officially diagnosed with Kleefstra Syndrome and known to be a reverser, focusing on cases of pronoun reversal. At the end of the two studies I have data in favor of both ToM hypothesis and echolalia hypothesis. Further researches should verify if echolalia can be related with a lack of ToM and the differences in pronoun reversal between typically developing children and children with disorders.
Keywords: echolalia, language development, theory of mind, pronouns, pronoun reversal, autism developmental disorders
Published in RUNG: 22.09.2021; Views: 2090; Downloads: 0
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