Interindividual variation in weighting prosodic and semantic cues during sentence comprehension: A partial replication of Van der Burght et al. (2021
Publication year
2024In
Chen, Y.; Chen, A.; Arvanati, A. (ed.), Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Speech Prosody, pp. 792-796Annotation
Speech Prosody 2024 (Leiden, the Netherlands, 2-5 July 2024)
Publication type
Article in monograph or in proceedings
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Editor(s)
Chen, Y.
Chen, A.
Arvanati, A.
Organization
SW OZ DCC PL
Languages used
English (eng)
Book title
Chen, Y.; Chen, A.; Arvanati, A. (ed.), Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Speech Prosody
Page start
p. 792
Page end
p. 796
Subject
PsycholinguisticsAbstract
Contrastive pitch accents can mark sentence elements occupying parallel roles. In "Mary kissed John, not Peter", a pitch accent on Mary or John cues the implied syntactic role of Peter. Van der Burght, Friederici, Goucha, and Hartwigsen (2021) showed that listeners can build expectations concerning syntactic and semantic properties of upcoming words, derived from pitch accent information they heard previously. To further explore these expectations, we attempted a partial replication of the original German study in Dutch. In the experimental sentences "Yesterday, the police officer arrested the thief, not the inspector/murderer", a pitch accent on subject or object cued the subject/object role of the ellipsis clause. Contrasting elements were additionally cued by the thematic role typicality of the nouns. Participants listened to sentences in which the ellipsis clause was omitted and selected the most plausible sentence-final noun (presented visually) via button press. Replicating the original study results, listeners based their sentence-final preference on the pitch accent information available in the sentence. However, as in the original study, individual differences between listeners were found, with some following prosodic information and others relying on a structural bias. The results complement the literature on ellipsis resolution and on interindividual variability in cue weighting.
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- Faculty of Social Sciences [30508]
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