Looking forwards and backwards: The real-time processing of Strong and Weak Crossover.

Glossa

Department of Linguistics, University of Maryland, 1401 Marie Mount Hall, College Park, MD 20742, US.

Published: July 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined how pronouns are processed in Strong and Weak Crossover constructions to see if syntactic rules influence the retrieval of antecedents.
  • In Experiment 1, results showed that the parser could access a displaced wh-phrase as an antecedent unless it was in a Strong Crossover relationship, indicating a possible application of Principle C during retrieval.
  • Experiment 2 clarified that even when Weak Crossover rules out binding, matching wh-phrases are still accessible, suggesting the parser utilizes principles like Principle C and c-command to inform memory retrieval efficiently.

Article Abstract

We investigated the processing of pronouns in Strong and Weak Crossover constructions as a means of probing the extent to which the incremental parser can use syntactic information to guide antecedent retrieval. In Experiment 1 we show that the parser accesses a displaced wh-phrase as an antecedent for a pronoun when no grammatical constraints prohibit binding, but the parser ignores the same wh-phrase when it stands in a Strong Crossover relation to the pronoun. These results are consistent with two possibilities. First, the parser could apply Principle C at antecedent retrieval to exclude the wh-phrase on the basis of the c-command relation between its gap and the pronoun. Alternatively, retrieval might ignore any phrases that do not occupy an Argument position. Experiment 2 distinguished between these two possibilities by testing antecedent retrieval under Weak Crossover. In Weak Crossover binding of the pronoun is ruled out by the argument condition, but not Principle C. The results of Experiment 2 indicate that antecedent retrieval accesses matching wh-phrases in Weak Crossover configurations. On the basis of these findings we conclude that the parser can make rapid use of Principle C and c-command information to constrain retrieval. We discuss how our results support a view of antecedent retrieval that integrates inferences made over unseen syntactic structure into constraints on backward-looking processes like memory retrieval.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5603713PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/gjgl.280DOI Listing

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