“…Considerable evidence has accumulated indicating that interpreting a scalar term pragmatically (e.g., some-but-not-all ) takes longer and requires more cognitive resources than interpreting it semantically (e.g., at least some ), which many researchers have argued is the opposite of what one would expect if implicatures are always calculated lexically and then cancelled as needed (Bott, Bailey, & Grodner, 2012; Bott & Noveck, 2004; De Neys & Schaeken, 2007; Dieussaert, Verkerk, Gillard & Schaeken, 2011; Feeney et al, 2004; Huang & Snedeker, 2009a, 2011; Marty, Chemla, & Spector, 2013; Noveck & Posada, 2003; but see Grodner et al, 2010). Whether this is a fatal argument depends on exactly what the underlying processing model looks like, and how the underlying processing gets transformed into the manifestations that we can measure (e.g., reaction time).…”