Literature DB >> 28236141

Effects of Age and Location in Chinese Relative Clauses Processing.

Wenguang He1,2, Na Xu3, Runqing Ji4.   

Abstract

Three experiments investigated Chinese relative clause processing with children, youths and elders using sentence-picture matching and self-paced reading methods. In Experiment 1, we found that object-extracted clause were easier to comprehend than subject-extracted clause , and object-modified relative clause (i.e., object-modified subject-extracted clause[Formula: see text]object-modified object-extracted clause) were difficult to comprehend than subject modified relative clause (subject-modified subject-extracted clause[Formula: see text]subject-modified object-extracted clause). Importantly, this paper also found 5-6.5 ages may be critical for children to comprehend RCs in Chinese. Experiment 2 also showed that S-ORCs were easier to comprehend than S-SRCs for youths and elders. Further, elders have more difficulty comprehending RCs than youths. Experiment 3 indicated that there were no significant differences in difficulty between O-SRCs and O-ORCs, and no differences were found between youths and elders. In general, our findings gave support to predictions of working memory-based theory, and also indicated that RCs processing has an intricate course. Many factors such as syntactic, language specificity, experience, personality, must all be considered in sentence processing.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Age; Chinese; Location of relative clause; Relative clause

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28236141     DOI: 10.1007/s10936-017-9480-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Psycholinguist Res        ISSN: 0090-6905


  27 in total

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9.  English-speaking children's comprehension of relative clauses: evidence for general-cognitive and language-specific constraints on development.

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10.  Aging and individual differences in binding during sentence understanding: evidence from temporary and global syntactic attachment ambiguities.

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