| Literature DB >> 24376303 |
Yi Ting Huang1, Xiaobei Zheng2, Xiangzhi Meng2, Jesse Snedeker3.
Abstract
Children's difficulty understanding passives in English has been attributed to the syntactic complexity, overall frequency, cue reliability, and/or incremental processing of this construction. To understand the role of these factors, we used the visual-world paradigm to examine comprehension in Mandarin Chinese where passives are infrequent but signaled by a highly valid marker (BEI). Eye-movements during sentences indicated that these markers triggered incremental role assignments in adults and 5-year-olds. Actions after sentences indicated that passives were often misinterpreted as actives when markers appeared after the referential noun ("Seal BEI it eat" → The seal is eaten by it). However, they were more likely to be interpreted correctly when markers appeared before ("It BEI seal eat" → It is eaten by the seal). The actions and the eye-movements suggest that for both adults and children, interpretations of passive are easier when they do not require revision of an earlier role assignment.Entities:
Keywords: Eye-tracking; Language development; Mandarin; Passives; Role assignment
Year: 2013 PMID: 24376303 PMCID: PMC3872120 DOI: 10.1016/j.jml.2013.08.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mem Lang ISSN: 0749-596X Impact factor: 3.059