Journal
COGNITION
Volume 212, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2021.104702
Keywords
Prosody; Information structure; Syntax; Semantics; Sentence processing
Categories
Funding
- Max Planck Society
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The study found that pitch accents can establish expectations in both syntactic and semantic domains, but only syntactic expectations are strong enough to interfere with sentence comprehension when violated. In the presence of contradictory cues in the same sentence, local syntactic cues take precedence over semantic cues and overwrite previous information signaled by prosody.
The language system uses syntactic, semantic, as well as prosodic cues to efficiently guide auditory sentence comprehension. Prosodic cues, such as pitch accents, can build expectations about upcoming sentence elements. This study investigates to what extent syntactic and semantic expectations generated by pitch accents can be dissociated and if so, which cues take precedence when contradictory information is present. We used sentences in which one out of two nominal constituents was placed in contrastive focus with a third one. All noun phrases carried overt syntactic information (case-marking of the determiner) and semantic information (typicality of the thematic role of the noun). Two experiments (a sentence comprehension and a sentence completion task) show that focus, marked by pitch accents, established expectations in both syntactic and semantic domains. However, only the syntactic expectations, when violated, were strong enough to interfere with sentence comprehension. Furthermore, when contradictory cues occurred in the same sentence, the local syntactic cue (case-marking) took precedence over the semantic cue (thematic role), and overwrote previous information cued by prosody. The findings indicate that during auditory sentence comprehension the processing system integrates different sources of information for argument role assignment, yet primarily relies on syntactic information.
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