Information structure in Makhuwa: Electrophysiological evidence for a universal processing account

Author:

Verdonschot Rinus G.1ORCID,van der Wal Jenneke2,Lewis Ashley13ORCID,Knudsen Birgit1,von Grebmer zu Wolfsthurn Sarah2,Schiller Niels O.245,Hagoort Peter13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen 6525 XD, The Netherlands

2. Leiden University Center for Linguistics, Leiden 2311 BD, The Netherlands

3. Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging, Radboud University, Nijmegen 6500 HB, The Netherlands

4. Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition, Leiden 2333 AK, The Netherlands

5. Department of Linguistics and Translation, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong 518057, Hong Kong

Abstract

There is evidence from both behavior and brain activity that the way information is structured, through the use of focus, can up-regulate processing of focused constituents, likely to give prominence to the relevant aspects of the input. This is hypothesized to be universal, regardless of the different ways in which languages encode focus. In order to test this universalist hypothesis, we need to go beyond the more familiar linguistic strategies for marking focus, such as by means of intonation or specific syntactic structures (e.g., it-clefts). Therefore, in this study, we examine Makhuwa-Enahara, a Bantu language spoken in northern Mozambique, which uniquely marks focus through verbal conjugation. The participants were presented with sentences that consisted of either a semantically anomalous constituent or a semantically nonanomalous constituent. Moreover, focus on this particular constituent could be either present or absent. We observed a consistent pattern: Focused information generated a more negative N400 response than the same information in nonfocus position. This demonstrates that regardless of how focus is marked, its consequence seems to result in an upregulation of processing of information that is in focus.

Funder

Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Reference27 articles.

1. K. Lambrecht, Information Structure and Sentence Form: Topic, Focus, and the Mental Representations of Discourse Referents (Cambridge University Press, 1996), vol. 71.

2. Information Structure in Linguistics

3. Information structure: linguistic, cognitive, and processing approaches

4. M. E. Rooth, Association with Focus (Montague Grammar, Semantics, Only, Even) (University of Massachusetts Amherst, 1985).

5. M. E. Rooth “On the interface principles for intonational focus” in Semantics and Linguistic Theory T. Galloway J. Spence Eds. (Cornell University Ithaca NY 1996) vol. 6 pp. 202–226.

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