09:00 - 10:30
Parallel sessions 1
09:00 - 10:30
Room: HSZ - 7E02
Chair/s:
Elena Albu, Francesca Capuano
Negation has long been a central topic in psychology, linguistics and the cognitive sciences with interest in its nature and functions continuing to grow. Understanding negation is cognitively demanding: negative sentences are often associated with higher processing costs and error rates. A prominent view holds that comprehending negation involves representing two mental models - the negated situation and the actual one - and selectively inhibiting the former. Despite the early emergence of no in children’s vocabularies, full mastery of sentential negation develops relatively late. Beyond its role as a logical operator, negation serves diverse discourse functions, from denying plausible assumptions to correcting misinformation. While negation is a linguistic universal, its realization varies substantially across languages, and the processing consequences of these differences remain underexplored. Moreover, the influence of negation extends beyond language, shaping memory, attitudes, and behavior.

Part 1 of this double symposium examines how negation is typically interpreted, which mechanisms are engaged, and how these processes play out cross-linguistically. Elena Albu asks how negation interacts with relative adjectives (Is a boy who is not short of medium height - or tall?). Claudia Maienborn and Frauke Buscher use denial contexts to contrast rejections of world-knowledge violations with rejections of semantic violations. Mechteld Van den Hoek Ostende probes whether inhibitory control is routinely recruited by studying children with ADHD, who often show difficulties with inhibition. Daniel Maurer employs negated cues in a spatial cueing paradigm to test whether comprehenders can orient directly to the actual facts or must first activate - and then inhibit - the negated alternative. Finally, Svetlana Mnogogreshnova compares Spanish and German, asking whether the earlier placement of the negation marker in Spanish relative to German modulates the mechanisms engaged during processing.
Submission 245
Temporal Dynamics of Negated Spatial Cueing
SymposiumTalk-03
Presented by: Daniel Maurer
Daniel MaurerLars-Michael SchöpperChristian Frings
Trier University, Germany
Human processing of negation is typically slower and less efficient than processing of affirmative information, yet the underlying mechanisms remain contested. Some accounts propose that negation may trigger direct access to the intended alternative (“not left” → “right”), while others entail a two-step process in which the negated concept is first activated and then competes with the intended meaning. A third possibility is that negation processing relies mainly on inhibitory mechanisms. In the present experiments, we employed a four-location spatial cueing task to contrast affirmative cues (e.g., “left”) with negated cues (e.g., “not right”). Targets appeared at one of four positions (left, right, top, bottom), enabling classification of trials as valid, neutral, or cue-opposite relative to the cue’s implied direction. We manipulated the cue-target interval across a range of short and medium intervals. Across two experiments (N = 50; N = 55), negated cues produced enhanced target detection at both the indicated location and at the cue-opposite position, consistent with a two-step model of negation processing. These effects parallel findings from counter-predictive cueing and suggest shared underlying mechanisms that may involve top-down meaning construction processes.