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Choice of Sentence Structure
Griffin, Z. M. & Weinstein-Tull,
J. (2003). Conceptual structure
modulates structural priming in the production of complex sentences.
Journal of Memory and
Language, 49, 537-555. [preprint pdf]
Speakers
tend to reproduce syntactic structures that they have recently comprehended
or produced. This structural or syntactic
priming occurs despite differences in the particular conceptual or event
roles expressed in prime and target sentences (Bock &
Loebell, 1990). In two sentence recall studies, we used the tendency of
speakers to paraphrase the finite complements of
object-raising verbs as infinitive complements (e.g., “John believed that
Mary was nice” as “John believed Mary to be nice”) to test
whether an additional conceptual role would affect priming. Prime constructions
with identical constituent orders as object-raising
infinitives but an additional conceptual role (“John persuaded Mary to be
nice”) resulted in fewer paraphrases. Contrasts with other
constructions suggest that the critical difference between primes was this
extra conceptual role. Thus, subtle differences in
conceptual structures can affect how speakers grammatically encode message
elements.
Griffin, Z. M., & Weinstein-Tull, J. (2001, March). Semantic and Syntactic
Constraints on Syntactic Priming.
Poster presented at the Fourteenth Annual CUNY Conference
on Human Sentence Processing,
Philadelphia, PA.
Griffin, Z. M., & Garton,
K. L. (2003, March). Procrastination in speaking: Ordering arguments during
speech.
Poster presented at the 16th Annual
CUNY Conference on Human Sentence Processing, Boston, MA.
[pdf] [gif]
Within the yet-to-be-determined
constraints of language production, speakers have flexibility in planning
their speech. Traditionally,
fluency has been associated with selecting all the words of a clause before
saying a word [1]. However, speakers can speak fluently
when selecting post-verbal nouns after speech begins [2, 3]. A clause-sized
syntactic plan may underlie such fluent incremental word
selection. Alternatively, syntactic structure may be created incrementally
as some theories suggest [4]. Despite evidence that
speakers prefer and benefit from flexibility in syntactic structure [5,
6], there is little evidence of when speakers may make syntactic
decisions.
When describing visual scenes, speakers gaze at referents while they prepare
words to refer to them [7]. Whether speakers prepare
words while speaking or further in advance, long gazes to referents occur
in order of mention and reflect the difficulty of preparing the
corresponding words [8-10]. Casual comparison of eye movements across experiments
suggested that speakers shifted their gaze
between objects less frequently when order of mention was pre-specified
than when it was not, and thus, gaze transitions might
reflect decisions about what to mention when.
We asked 34 participants to perform a picture-matching task. A confederate
pretended to describe a scene [11]. Participants repeated
the description if it matched the one they viewed, described their scene
if there was overlap, or said “No match.” Critical pictures
depicted transfer events (e.g., a woman throwing a bone to a dog) that are
usually described with prepositional or double object
datives, varying the order of arguments after the verb. To minimize gaze
shifts due to comprehending scenes, each experimental trial
was immediately preceded by a “no match” trial with the same scene. The
confederate then described the participant’s scene or one
with the same agent to elicit a description. We hypothesized that when participants
generated descriptions they would make more
gaze transitions between patient and recipient as they decided which argument
order to use than when they repeated the sentence.
When any such difference occurred relative to speech onset would suggest
when argument order was decided for a clause. As usual,
speakers gazed at referents before mentioning them. Supporting the view
that argument order (and therefore, some syntactic
structure) may be decided during speech, more transitions (and transitions/second)
occurred during generated than repeated
sentences, but not before speech onset. We also plan to present an
extension in which gaze transitions are manipulated via
structural priming without overlap in content.
References
1. F. Goldman-Eisler, Psycholinguistics: Experiments
in spontaneous speech (Academic Press, London, 1968).
2. G. Kempen, P. Huijbers, Cognition 14, 185-209 (1983).
3. M. Smith, L. Wheeldon, Cognition 73, 205-246 (1999).
4. G. Kempen, E. Hoenkamp, Cognitive Science 11, 201-258
(1987).
5. V. S. Ferreira, Journal of Memory and Language 35,
724-755 (1996).
6. T. Wasow, Journal of Psycholinguistic Research 20,
347-361 (1997).
7. Z. M. Griffin, K. Bock, Psychological Science 11,
274-279 (2000).
8. Z. M. Griffin, Cognition 82, B1-B14 (2001).
9. Z. M. Griffin, paper presented at the Architectures
and Mechanisms for Language Processing, Tenerife, Spain (2002, Sept).
10. A. S. Meyer, A. Sleiderink, W. J. M. Levelt, Cognition
66, B25-B33 (1998).
11. H. P. Branigan, M. J. Pickering, A. A. Cleland, Cognition
75, B13-25 (2000).
Griffin, Z. M. (2001, September). Verbs remember their complements. Poster
presented at Architectures and Mechanisms of Language Processes conference, Saarbrücken,
Germany.
Bock, K., & Griffin, Z. M. (2000). The
persistence of structural priming: Transient activation or implicit learning? Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 129(2),
177-192.
Structural priming in language production
is a tendency to recreate a recently uttered syntactic structure
in different words. This
tendency can be seen independent of specific lexical items, thematic
roles, or word sequences. Two alternative proposals about the
mechanism behind structural priming include (a) short-term activation from
a memory representation of a priming structure and (b)
longer term adaptation within the cognitive mechanisms for creating sentences,
as a form of procedural learning. Two experiments
evaluated these hypotheses, focusing on the persistence of structural priming.
Both experiments yielded priming that endured
beyond adjacent sentences, persisting over 2 intervening sentences
in Experiment 1 and over 10 in Experiment 2. Although memory
may have short-term consequences for some components of this kind
of priming, the persisting effects are more compatible with a
learning account than a transient memory account.
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