Affiliation:
1. Nantes University/French National Center for Scientific Research
2. University of Massachusetts Amherst
Abstract
AbstractRecent research in psycholinguistics supports the hypothesis that retrieval from working memory is a key component of establishing syntactic dependencies in comprehension. This can result in so‐called grammatical illusions. These illusions have been modeled as the result of a content‐addressable retrieval process in sentence comprehension that allows grammatically inaccessible licensing elements to be reactivated, creating a spurious perception of acceptability. This article reports five studies that establish the existence of a new grammatical illusion involving quantification at a distance and the licensing of so‐called de NPs in French. Our results suggest that this grammatical illusion is interestingly constrained by syntactic properties of the licensors. Specifically, quantifiers that independently participate in quantification‐at‐a‐distance constructions were seen to create grammatical illusions to a greater extent than quantifiers that do not participate in that construction. Consistent with previous work on the nature of cues in memory retrieval, we suggest that this is the result of fairly specific abstract syntactic cues that guide retrieval of a licensing element. This article thus brings further evidence that syntax is crucially used to structure working memory over the course of a parse.
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Reference87 articles.
1. Alcocer Pedro andColinPhillips.2012.Using relational syntactic constraints in content‐addressable memory architectures for sentence parsing. Unpublished paper.Work conducted at:University of Maryland College Park.
2. Processing elided verb phrases with flawed antecedents: The recycling hypothesis;Arregui Ana;Journal of Memory and Language,2006
3. Degree quantifiers, bare quantifiers and intensifiers in the midfield: A new look at quantification at a distance;Authier J.‐Marc.;Glossa,2016
4. Does case marking affect agreement attraction in comprehension?;Avetisyan Serine;Journal of Memory and Language,2020