Differential Effects of Agency, Animacy, and Syntactic Prominence on Production and Comprehension: Evidence From a Verb-Initial Language

被引:3
|
作者
Bondoc, Ivan Paul [1 ]
Schafer, Amy J. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Toronto, Dept Linguist, Sidney Smith Hall,4th Floor,100 St George St, Toronto, ON M5S 3G3, Canada
[2] Univ Hawaii Manoa, Dept Linguist, Honolulu, HI 96822 USA
关键词
voice system; Tagalog focus; agent prominence; pivothood; constraints; THEMATIC ROLE-ASSIGNMENT; WORD-ORDER; ADAPTIVE MEMORY; WORKING-MEMORY; CONCEPTUAL ACCESSIBILITY; INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES; SENTENCE PRODUCTION; ARGUMENT STRUCTURE; ROLE INFORMATION; VISUAL CONTEXT;
D O I
10.1037/cep0000280
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Effects of animacy and agent prominence in linguistic and cognitive processing are well-established in the literature. However, it is less clear how strongly an agent argument will influence production and comprehension when a sentence also contains another prominent argument. We examine this question with Tagalog, a verb-initial language, which designates a syntactically prominent, subject-like element (the pivot) without demoting the grammatical status of the core agent. We implemented two experiments that investigated the influences of agent and pivot prominence on syntactic linear word order patterns in production and on anticipatory gaze patterns in comprehension. Tagalog's grammar allowed us to separate the influence of agentivity from animacy by manipulating the animacy of the pivot (animate pivots: agent and benefactive voices; inanimate pivots: patient and instrument voices). The production results contrasted with the comprehension results: agent and pivot prominence both emerged strongly in a fragment-completion production task, but animacy dominated anticipatory gaze patterns in a visual-world comprehension task. The results of these experiments demonstrate variability in production and comprehension outcomes as well as an apparent mismatch between the constraints that shape these two systems, which we attribute to contrasting goals in production versus comprehension and to the organization of information in verb-initial languages. The investigation highlights the value of research on languages with typologically understudied structural properties in revealing mechanisms of the production and comprehension systems. Public Significance Statement We examined whether speakers of Tagalog, which typically starts sentences with the verb, use grammatical information on the verb to order subsequent phrases when producing sentences and anticipate them when listening to sentences. Our experiments showed contrasts between production and comprehension in responsiveness to grammatical information versus whether phrases refer to animate or inanimate entities. Our findings highlight the importance of researching understudied languages.
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页码:302 / 326
页数:25
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