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Incremental Processing of Coreference and Binding in Japanese.

Authors :
Aoshima, Sachiko
Yoshida, Masaya
Phillips, Colin
Source :
Syntax. Jun2009, Vol. 12 Issue 2, p93-134. 42p. 3 Charts, 4 Graphs.
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

This article presents two on-line self-paced reading studies and three off-line acceptability judgment studies on the processing of backward anaphoric dependencies in Japanese in which a pronoun precedes potential antecedent noun phrases. The studies investigate the real-time formation of coreference relations and operator-variable binding relations to determine whether speakers of head-final languages are able to construct grammatically accurate syntactic structures before they encounter a verb. The results of the acceptability rating studies confirm previous claims that backwards anaphoric dependencies in Japanese are more acceptable in configurations where a pronoun has been fronted via scrambling from a position where it would be c-commanded by its antecedent. The results of the on-line studies demonstrate that these acceptability contrasts have an immediate impact on parsing. Reading-time results showed immediate sensitivity to the semantic congruency between an NP and a preceding pronoun in noncanonical (“scrambled”) word orders, and no immediate effect of semantic congruency otherwise. This contrast was found both for coreference relations involving the personal pronouns kare/ kanojo (experiment 1) and for operator-variable relations involving the demonstrative pronoun soko (experiment 3). These findings go beyond previous evidence for incremental parsing in head-final languages by showing that Japanese speakers build compositional structures (such as anaphoric relations) in a grammatically constrained fashion in advance of encountering a verb in the input. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13680005
Volume :
12
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Syntax
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39464622
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9612.2009.00123.x