2023
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1244249
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On truth and polarity in negation processing: language-specific effects in non-linguistic contexts

Norbert Vanek,
Haoruo Zhang

Abstract: IntroductionThis study examines how negation is processed in a nonverbal context (e.g., when assessing ▲ ≠ ▲) by speakers of a truth-based system like Mandarin and a polarity-based system like English. In a truth-based system, negation may take longer to process because it is typically attached to the negation as a whole (it is not true that triangle does not equal triangle), whereas in polarity-based systems, negation is processed relatively faster because it is attached to just the equation symbol (triangle … Show more

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“…The one-step or two-step debate is additionally complexified by factors that are known to cause processing differences, such as language-specific structural cues in negation 15 18 . One such linguistic cue is negative concord 6 , 19 21 a type of negation that languages like English and Croatian tolerate differently.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The one-step or two-step debate is additionally complexified by factors that are known to cause processing differences, such as language-specific structural cues in negation 15 18 . One such linguistic cue is negative concord 6 , 19 21 a type of negation that languages like English and Croatian tolerate differently.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%