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Positional influences on information packaging : insights from pological fields in german

Journal of memory and language. Bd. 67. H. 2. Orlando, Fla.: Academic Press 2012 S. 295 - 310

Erscheinungsjahr: 2012

ISBN/ISSN: 1096-0821 ; 0749-596X

Publikationstyp: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

Sprache: Englisch

Doi/URN: 10.1016/j.jml.2012.05.006

Volltext über DOI/URN

Geprüft:Bibliothek

Inhaltszusammenfassung


We present three event-related potential studies that investigated the contribution of givenness and position-induced topicality (what a sentence is about) to information processing. The studies compared two types of referential expressions (given and inferred noun phrases (NPs)) in distinct sentential positions. The data revealed position-specific effects, reflected by an interaction of topicality and givenness: inferred NPs registered a more pronounced Late Positivity than given NPs in the ...We present three event-related potential studies that investigated the contribution of givenness and position-induced topicality (what a sentence is about) to information processing. The studies compared two types of referential expressions (given and inferred noun phrases (NPs)) in distinct sentential positions. The data revealed position-specific effects, reflected by an interaction of topicality and givenness: inferred NPs registered a more pronounced Late Positivity than given NPs in the canonical sentence-medial position, but not sentence-initially (Experiment 1). Additionally, there was a stable effect of givenness across positions, reflected by an N400 for inferred over given NPs. From a discourse dynamic perspective, the N400 is considered to reflect context-induced linking processes. The Late Positivity is associated with maintaining and updating discourse structure and manifests position-specific instructions for information storage. Subsequent studies strengthened this information packaging account by showing that the Late Positivity pattern is unaffected by syntactic function reanalysis (Experiment 2) or dislocation demands (Experiment 3). (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.» weiterlesen» einklappen

Autoren


Schumacher, Petra (Autor)
Hung, Yu-Chen (Autor)

Klassifikation


DFG Fachgebiet:
1.14 - Sprachwissenschaften

DDC Sachgruppe:
Sprachwissenschaft, Linguistik