Abstract
This paper models conventionalisation of language structure as constitutive of processing fluency. I postulate that the difference in conventionalisation of linguistic forms used for communication significantly influences our reasoning about linguistically-expressed problems. Two studies are reported that tested this hypothesis with the use of variably conventionalised - fluent and disfluent - formulations of problem-solving tasks. The findings indicate that even in tasks requiring analytic reasoning, the degree to which the linguistic forms employed to communicate are conventionalised is correlated with the subjects' performance success rate. On a more general level, this paper seeks to empirically address the nature of links between linguistic form and meaning construction.
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Deckert, M. (2015). Processing Fluency and Decision-Making: The Role of Language Structure. Psychology of Language and Communication, 19(2), 149–161. https://doi.org/10.1515/plc-2015-0009
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