The Relationship between Eye Gaze and Verb Agreement in American Sign Language: An Eye-tracking Study

被引:0
|
作者
Robin Thompson
Karen Emmorey
Robert Kluender
机构
[1] Laboratory for Cognitive Neuroscience,The Salk Institute for Biological Studies
[2] San Diego State University,Laboratory for Language and Cognitive Neuroscience
[3] University of California,Department of Linguistics
[4] San Diego,undefined
来源
关键词
Noun Phrase; Spatial Verb; American Sign; Transitive Verb; Verb Agreement;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The representation of agreement is a crucial aspect of current syntactic theory, and therefore should apply in both signed and spoken languages. Neidle et al. (2000) claim that all verb types in American Sign Language (agreeing, spatial, and plain) can occur with abstract syntactic agreement for subject and object. On this view, abstract agreement can be marked with either manual agreement morphology (verb directed toward locations associated with the subject/object) or non-manual agreement (eye gaze toward the object/head tilt toward the subject). Non-manual agreement is claimed to function independently as a feature-checking mechanism since it can occur with plain verbs not marked with overt morphological agreement. We conducted a language production experiment using head-mounted eye-tracking to directly measure signers’ eye gaze. The results were inconsistent with Neidle et al.’s claims. While eye gaze accompanying (manually/morphologically) agreeing verbs was most frequently directed toward the location of the syntactic object, eye gaze accompanying plain verbs was rarely directed toward the object. Further, eye gaze accompanying spatial verbs was toward the locative argument, rather than toward the object of transitive verbs or the subject of intransitive verbs as predicted by Neidle et.al. Additionally, we found a consistent difference in the height of directed eye gaze between spatial and agreeing verbs. Gaze was directed lower in signing space for locative marking than for object marking, thus clearly distinguishing these two argument types. Plain verbs occurring with null object pronouns were not marked by gaze toward the location of the object and always occurred with an overt object topic. Thus, Neidle et.al.’s analysis of null objects as licensed by agreement (manual or non-manual) was not supported. Rather, the data substantiated Lillo-Martin’s (1986) claim that null arguments for plain verbs are licensed by topics. To account for the observed patterns of eye gaze, we propose an analysis of eye gaze agreement for agreeing and spatial verbs as marking the ‘lowest’ available argument on a noun phrase accessibility hierarchy.
引用
收藏
页码:571 / 604
页数:33
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Examination of the Relationship Between Attentional Biases and Body Dissatisfaction: An Eye-Tracking Study
    Misener, Kaylee
    Libben, Maya
    [J]. COGNITIVE THERAPY AND RESEARCH, 2020, 44 (03) : 581 - 595
  • [22] Examination of the Relationship Between Attentional Biases and Body Dissatisfaction: An Eye-Tracking Study
    Kaylee Misener
    Maya Libben
    [J]. Cognitive Therapy and Research, 2020, 44 : 581 - 595
  • [23] A Study on the Development of the Psychological Assessment a Using Eye-Tracking: Focused on Eye Gaze Processing of Literacy Text
    Jeon, Joon Hyun
    Kim, Gyoung
    Kim, Jeong Ae
    [J]. AUGMENTED COGNITION, AC 2019, 2019, 11580 : 74 - 83
  • [24] Person and the syntax-discourse interface: An eye-tracking study of agreement
    Mancini, Simona
    Molinaro, Nicola
    Davidson, Doug J.
    Aviles, Alberto
    Carreiras, Manuel
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MEMORY AND LANGUAGE, 2014, 76 : 141 - 157
  • [25] An eye-tracking study of learned attention in second language acquisition
    Ellis, Nick C.
    Hafeez, Kausar
    Martin, Katherine I.
    Chen, Lillian
    Boland, Julie
    Sagarra, Nuria
    [J]. APPLIED PSYCHOLINGUISTICS, 2014, 35 (03) : 547 - 579
  • [26] Commentary on: The Impact of Breast Symmetry on Eye Movement and Gaze Pattern: An Eye-Tracking Investigation
    Pietruski, Piotr
    [J]. AESTHETIC SURGERY JOURNAL, 2021, 41 (11) : NP1519 - NP1520
  • [27] How charisma shapes a leader's gaze behavior: An eye-tracking study
    Maran, Thomas
    Liegl, Simon
    Furtner, Marco
    Ravet-Brown, Theo
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2023, 58 : 683 - 683
  • [28] Effect of Subtitles on Gaze Behavior during Shot Changes: An Eye-tracking Study
    Joy, Jeril
    Padakannaya, Prakash
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH, 2023, 16 (02): : 4 - 13
  • [29] Reward and Cue Effects on Orientation Judgements: A Gaze Contingent Eye-Tracking Study
    Anderson, Britt
    Marsh, Christie Haskell
    [J]. PERCEPTION, 2019, 48 : 216 - 216
  • [30] Gaze Behavior in Social Fear Conditioning: An Eye-Tracking Study in Virtual Reality
    Reichenberger, Jonas
    Pfaller, Michael
    Muehlberger, Andreas
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2020, 11