Effects of event participant preview and patient animacy in sentence production: a cross-linguistic comparison between English and Russian
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/36325Dato
2024-12-16Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
                
            
Sammendrag
Theories of sentence planning (Linear vs. Hierarchical Incrementality) differ in 
their assumptions about how much conceptual information speakers require 
to initiate linguistic encoding. This picture description study tested whether 
speakers’ selection of starting points for their sentences is influenced by the 
availability of information about a referent (perceptual accessibility) and by 
referent animacy (conceptual accessibility) in English and Russian, two languages differing in syntactic flexibility, case marking and other typological 
features. Target pictures showed transitive events with animate agents and 
animate/inanimate patients. One of the referents was previewed for 300 ms 
before presentation of the full picture. This preview manipulation was 
intended to enable earlier conceptual and lexical encoding of the first 
referent relative to the second referent. The frequency of agent-first structures and speech onset times (SOT) were compared between conditions as 
well as across the course of the experiment. The results showed that the 
likelihood of speakers producing agent-first responses (1) dropped when 
patient referents are previewed, (2) dropped when patient referents are 
animate, and (3) changed over the course of the experiment in English and 
Russian in different ways. Analyses of speech onsets of agent-first sentences 
also showed increases in processing costs in conditions where animate 
patients were previewed, consistent with a revision process taking place 
after early encoding of a referent that was not ultimately produced in 
sentence-initial position. Taken together, the findings suggest that both 
speaker groups engaged in linearly incremental encoding (i.e. reliance on 
minimal conceptual information to begin planning) to some extent, and that 
reliance on this planning strategy can change over time. The results are also 
discussed in the context of the Production-Distribution-Comprehension 
account.
Forlag
Taylor & FrancisSitering
Gerwien, Schlenter, Penke, Konopka. Effects of event participant preview and patient animacy in sentence production: a cross-linguistic comparison between English and Russian. Discourse Processes. 2024Metadata
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Copyright 2024 The Author(s)


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