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. 2002 Mar;31(2):107-30.
doi: 10.1023/a:1014922700023.

Production and recognition bias of stylistic sentences using a story reading task

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Production and recognition bias of stylistic sentences using a story reading task

Jennifer Zervakis et al. J Psycholinguist Res. 2002 Mar.

Abstract

Four experiments examined participants' ability to produce surface characteristics of sentences using an on-line story reading task. Participants read a series of stories in which either all, or the majority of sentences were written in the same "style," or surface form. Twice per story, participants were asked to fill in a blank consistent with the story. For sentences that contained three stylistic regularities, participants imitated either all three characteristics (Experiment 2) or two of the three characteristics (Experiment 1), depending on the proportion of in-style sentences. Participants demonstrated a recognition bias for the read style in an unannounced recognition task. When participants read stories in which the two styles were the dative/double object alternation, participants demonstrated a syntactic priming effect in the cloze task, but no consistent recognition bias in a later recognition test (Experiments 3 and 4).

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