Literature DB >> 24803423

On the parity of structural persistence in language production and comprehension.

Kristen M Tooley1, Kathryn Bock2.   

Abstract

Structural priming creates structural persistence. That is, differences in experience with syntax can change subsequent language performance, and the changes can be observed in both language production and comprehension. However, the effects in comprehension and production appear to differ. In comprehension, persistence is typically found when the verbs are the same in primes and targets; in production, persistence occurs without verb overlap. The contrast suggests a theoretically important hypothesis: parsing in comprehension is lexically driven while formulation in production is structurally driven. A major weakness in this hypothesis about comprehension-production differences is that its empirical motivation rests on the outcomes of experiments in which the priming manipulations differ, the primed sentence structures differ, and the measures of priming differ. To sharpen the comparison, we examined structural persistence with and without verb overlap in both reading comprehension and spoken production, using the same prime presentation procedure, the same syntactic structures, the same sentences, and the same participants. These methods yielded abstract structural persistence in comprehension as well as production. A measure of the strength of persistence revealed significant effects of priming and verb overlap without significant comprehension-production differences. This argues for uniformity in the structural mechanisms of language processing.
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Language comprehension and production; Structural persistence; Syntactic priming

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24803423      PMCID: PMC4096381          DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2014.04.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cognition        ISSN: 0010-0277


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