| Literature DB >> 24072953 |
Ann Bunger1, Anna Papafragou, John C Trueswell.
Abstract
This priming study investigates the role of conceptual structure during language production, probing whether English speakers are sensitive to the structure of the event encoded by a prime sentence. In two experiments, participants read prime sentences aloud before describing motion events. Primes differed in 1) syntactic frame, 2) degree of lexical and conceptual overlap with target events, and 3) distribution of event components within frames. Results demonstrate that conceptual overlap between primes and targets led to priming of (a) the information that speakers chose to include in their descriptions of target events, (b) the way that information was mapped to linguistic elements, and (c) the syntactic structures that were built to communicate that information. When there was no conceptual overlap between primes and targets, priming was not successful. We conclude that conceptual structure is a level of representation activated during priming, and that it has implications for both Message Planning and Linguistic Formulation.Entities:
Keywords: event structure; language production; motion events; structural priming
Year: 2013 PMID: 24072953 PMCID: PMC3780438 DOI: 10.1016/j.jml.2013.04.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mem Lang ISSN: 0749-596X Impact factor: 3.059