Literature DB >> 28288369

Phrasal prosody constrains syntactic analysis in toddlers.

Alex de Carvalho1, Isabelle Dautriche2, Isabelle Lin3, Anne Christophe4.   

Abstract

This study examined whether phrasal prosody can impact toddlers' syntactic analysis. French noun-verb homophones were used to create locally ambiguous test sentences (e.g., using the homophone as a noun: [le bébésouris] [a bien mangé] - [the baby mouse] [ate well] or using it as a verb: [le bébé] [sourità sa maman] - [the baby] [smiles to his mother], where brackets indicate prosodic phrase boundaries). Although both sentences start with the same words (le-bebe-/suʁi/), they can be disambiguated by the prosodic boundary that either directly precedes the critical word /suʁi/ when it is a verb, or directly follows it when it is a noun. Across two experiments using an intermodal preferential looking procedure, 28-month-olds (Exp. 1 and 2) and 20-month-olds (Exp. 2) listened to the beginnings of these test sentences while watching two images displayed side-by-side on a TV-screen: one associated with the noun interpretation of the ambiguous word (e.g., a mouse) and the other with the verb interpretation (e.g., a baby smiling). The results show that upon hearing the first words of these sentences, toddlers were able to correctly exploit prosodic information to access the syntactic structure of sentences, which in turn helped them to determine the syntactic category of the ambiguous word and to correctly identify its intended meaning: participants switched their eye-gaze toward the correct image based on the prosodic condition in which they heard the ambiguous target word. This provides evidence that during the first steps of language acquisition, toddlers are already able to exploit the prosodic structure of sentences to recover their syntactic structure and predict the syntactic category of upcoming words, an ability which would be extremely useful to discover the meaning of novel words.
Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Eye movements; Infants speech perception; Language acquisition; Parsing; Phrasal prosody; Sentence processing; Syntactic ambiguity resolution

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28288369     DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2017.02.018

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


  6 in total

1.  Referential context and executive functioning influence children's resolution of syntactic ambiguity.

Authors:  Zhenghan Qi; Jessica Love; Cynthia Fisher; Sarah Brown-Schmidt
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn       Date:  2020-06-25       Impact factor: 3.051

2.  New evidence of a rhythmic priming effect that enhances grammaticality judgments in children.

Authors:  Alexander Chern; Barbara Tillmann; Chloe Vaughan; Reyna L Gordon
Journal:  J Exp Child Psychol       Date:  2018-05-16

3.  Familiar words can serve as a semantic seed for syntactic bootstrapping.

Authors:  Mireille Babineau; Alex de Carvalho; John Trueswell; Anne Christophe
Journal:  Dev Sci       Date:  2020-07-25

4.  Studying the Real-Time Interpretation of Novel Noun and Verb Meanings in Young Children.

Authors:  Alex de Carvalho; Mireille Babineau; John C Trueswell; Sandra R Waxman; Anne Christophe
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2019-02-18

5.  Lexical category acquisition is facilitated by uncertainty in distributional co-occurrences.

Authors:  Giovanni Cassani; Robert Grimm; Walter Daelemans; Steven Gillis
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-12-28       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 6.  Is atypical rhythm a risk factor for developmental speech and language disorders?

Authors:  Enikő Ladányi; Valentina Persici; Anna Fiveash; Barbara Tillmann; Reyna L Gordon
Journal:  Wiley Interdiscip Rev Cogn Sci       Date:  2020-04-03
  6 in total

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