Prosodic influences on the resolution of temporary ambiguity during on-line sentence processing |
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Authors: | H. Nicholas Nagel Lewis P. Shapiro Betty Tuller Rebecca Nawy |
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Affiliation: | (1) 41 Highland Street, 01982 Hamilton, Massachusetts;(2) Neuropsychology Laboratory, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts;(3) San Diego State University, San Diego, California;(4) Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, Florida |
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Abstract: | We present three experiments designed to investigate the role of prosody during sentence processing. The first investigated the question of whether an utterance's prosodic contour influences its comprehension on-line. We spliced the beginning and end portions of direct object and embedded clause sentences and observed the consequent effects on comprehension using a dual-task procedure to measure processing load. Our second experiment sought to determine-whether the constituent structure of these sentences could be reliably predicted using prosodic information. We found that the duration and F0 contour associated with the main-clause verb and the following NP reliably distinguished between the direct object and embedded clause constructions. In the final experiment, we manipulated the duration of the main-clause verb and found that subjects used this information to guide their initial parse during on-line sentence comprehension. The need for a model of sentence processing that addresses the use of prosodic information is discussed.The work reported in this paper was supported in part by NTH grant DC00494. |
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