| Literature DB >> 26385782 |
Yao-Ting Sung1,2, Jih-Ho Cha2, Jung-Yueh Tu3, Ming-Da Wu2, Wei-Chun Lin2.
Abstract
A number of previous studies on Chinese relative clauses (RC) have reported conflicting results on processing asymmetry. This study aims to revisit the prevalent debate on whether subject-extracted RCs (SRC) or object-extracted RCs (ORC) are easier to process by using the eye-movement technique. In the current study, the data are analyzed in terms of the gaze duration and regression of eye-movement in three critical areas: head noun, embedded verb, and RC-modifying noun phrase as subject. The results show an ORC preference for the processing of RC structures, which supports the word-order account and the Dependency Locality Theory, and a better cross-clausal integration for SRC, which supports the perspective-shift account. The processing asymmetry in Chinese RCs are discussed under relevant theoretical accounts, such as structure-based, memory-based, and perspective shift accounts. We argue that the findings are associated with the syntactic nature of Chinese (a head-initial language with pre-nominal RCs).Keywords: Eye-movement; Mandarin Chinese; Processing asymmetry; Relative clauses; Sentence complexity
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26385782 DOI: 10.1007/s10936-015-9394-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Psycholinguist Res ISSN: 0090-6905