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[1]
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Jean-Pierre Koenig, Gail Mauner, Breton Bienvenue, and Kathy Conklin.
What with?: The anatomy of a (proto)-role.
Journal of Semantics, 25:175-220, 2008.
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[2]
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Kathy Conklin, Jean-Pierre Koenig, and Gail Mauner.
The role of specificity in the lexical encoding of participants.
Brain and Language, 90:221-230, 2004.
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[3]
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Jean-Pierre Koenig, Gail Mauner, and Breton Bienvenue.
Arguments for adjuncts.
Cognition, 89:67-103, 2003.
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[4]
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Gail Mauner, Victoria A. Fromkin, and Thomas L. Cornell.
Comprehension and grammaticality judgments in agrammatism: Agreement,
feature sharing, and complex syntactic objects.
Brain and Language, 45(3):218-248, 2003.
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[5]
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Jean-Pierre Koenig, Gail Mauner, and Breton Bienvenue.
Factors of argumenthood: A quantitative and experimental perspective.
In C.T. McLennan, P.A. Luce, G. Mauner, and J. Charles-Luce, editors,
University at Buffalo Working Papers on Language and Perception,
volume 1, pages 108-150. University at Buffalo, 2002.
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[6]
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Jean-Pierre Koenig, Gail Mauner, and Breton Bienvenue.
Class selectivity and the lexical encoding of participant
information.
Brain and Language, 81:224-235, 2002.
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[7]
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Gail Mauner, Jean-Pierre Koenig, Alissa Melinger, and Breton Bienvenue.
The lexical source of unexpressed participants and their role in
sentence and discourse understanding.
In Paola Merlo and Suzanne Stevenson, editors, The Lexical Basis
of Sentence Processing: Formal, Computational and Experimental Issues, pages
233-254. John Benjamins, Amsterdam, 2002.
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[8]
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Gail Mauner, Alissa Melinger, Jean-Pierre Koenig, and Breton Bienvenue.
When is schematic participant information encoded?: Evidence from
eye-monitoring.
Journal of Memory and Language, 47:386-406, 2002.
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[9]
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Gail Mauner and Jean-Pierre Koenig.
Linguistic vs. conceptual sources of implicit agents in sentence
comprehension.
Journal of Memory and Language, 43:110-134, 2000.
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[10]
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Jean-Pierre Koenig and Gail Mauner.
A-definites and the semantics of implicit arguments.
Journal of Semantics, 16(3):207-236, 1999.
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[11]
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Gail Mauner and Jean-Pierre Koenig.
Lexical encoding of event participant information.
Brain and Language, 68:178-184, 1999.
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[12]
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Gail Mauner.
The Role of Implicit Arguments in Sentence Processing.
PhD thesis, University of Rochester, 1996.
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[13]
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Gail Mauner.
Examining the empirical and linguistic bases of current theories of
agrammatism.
Brain and Language, 50:339-368, 1995.
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[14]
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Gail Mauner, Michael Tanenhaus, and Greg Carlson.
Implicit arguments in sentence processing.
Journal of Memory and Language, 34:357-382, 1995.
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[15]
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Gail Mauner, Michael K. Tanenhaus, and Greg N. Carlson.
A note on parallelism effects in processing deep and surface
verb-phrase anaphors.
Language and Cognitive Processes, 10:1-12, 1995.
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[16]
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Michael Tanenhaus, Julie Boland, Gail Mauner, and Greg Carlson.
More on combinatory lexical information.
In G. Altmann and R. Shillcock, editors, Cognitive models of
speech processing: The second Sperlonga meeting, pages 297-319. Erlbaum,
Hillsdale, NJ, 1993.
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