{"title":"Romance N Prep N constructions in visual word recognition","authors":"Inga Hennecke, H. Baayen","doi":"10.1075/ml.20014.hen","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n N Prep N constructions such as Sp. bicicleta de montaña ‘mountain bike’ are very productive and\n frequent in Romance languages. They commonly have been classified as syntagmatic compounds that show no\n orthographic union and exhibit an internal structure that resembles free syntactic structures, such as Sp. libro para\n niños ‘book for children’. There is no consensus on how to best distinguish lexical from syntactic N Prep N\n constructions. The present paper presents an explorative eye-tracking study on N Prep N constructions, varying both lexical type\n (lexical vs. syntactic) and preposition across three languages, French, Spanish and Portuguese. The task of the eye-tracking study\n was a reading aloud paradigm of the constructions in sentence context. Constructions were fixated on less when more frequent,\n independent of lexical status. There was also modest evidence that a higher construction frequency afforded shorter total fixation\n durations, but only for lower deciles of the response distribution. The (construction-initial) head noun also received fewer\n fixations as construction frequency increased, and also when the head noun was more frequent. The second fixation durations on the\n head noun also revealed an effect of lexical status, with syntactic constructions receiving shorter fixations at the 5th and 7th\n deciles. The probability of a fixation on the preposition decreased with preposition frequency, but first fixations on the\n preposition increased with preposition frequency. The prepositions of Portuguese, the language with the richest inventory of\n prepositions, received more fixations than the prepositions of French and Spanish. The observed pattern of results is consistent\n with models of lexical processing in which reading is guided by knowledge of both higher-level constructions and knowledge of key\n constituents such as the head noun and the preposition.","PeriodicalId":45215,"journal":{"name":"Mental Lexicon","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.6000,"publicationDate":"2021-10-08","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Mental Lexicon","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1075/ml.20014.hen","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"LINGUISTICS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
Abstract
N Prep N constructions such as Sp. bicicleta de montaña ‘mountain bike’ are very productive and
frequent in Romance languages. They commonly have been classified as syntagmatic compounds that show no
orthographic union and exhibit an internal structure that resembles free syntactic structures, such as Sp. libro para
niños ‘book for children’. There is no consensus on how to best distinguish lexical from syntactic N Prep N
constructions. The present paper presents an explorative eye-tracking study on N Prep N constructions, varying both lexical type
(lexical vs. syntactic) and preposition across three languages, French, Spanish and Portuguese. The task of the eye-tracking study
was a reading aloud paradigm of the constructions in sentence context. Constructions were fixated on less when more frequent,
independent of lexical status. There was also modest evidence that a higher construction frequency afforded shorter total fixation
durations, but only for lower deciles of the response distribution. The (construction-initial) head noun also received fewer
fixations as construction frequency increased, and also when the head noun was more frequent. The second fixation durations on the
head noun also revealed an effect of lexical status, with syntactic constructions receiving shorter fixations at the 5th and 7th
deciles. The probability of a fixation on the preposition decreased with preposition frequency, but first fixations on the
preposition increased with preposition frequency. The prepositions of Portuguese, the language with the richest inventory of
prepositions, received more fixations than the prepositions of French and Spanish. The observed pattern of results is consistent
with models of lexical processing in which reading is guided by knowledge of both higher-level constructions and knowledge of key
constituents such as the head noun and the preposition.
像Sp. bicicleta de montaña“山地车”这样的结构在罗曼语中是非常高效和频繁的。它们通常被归类为没有正字法结合的组合化合物,并表现出类似于自由句法结构的内部结构,例如Sp. libro para niños ' book for children '。关于如何区分词法N - Prep - N结构和句法N - Prep - N结构尚无共识。本文对法语、西班牙语和葡萄牙语三种语言中不同词汇类型(词汇与句法)和介词的N Prep N结构进行了探索性眼动研究。眼动追踪研究的任务是句子语境中结构的大声朗读范式。结构被关注的频率越低,而频率越高,与词汇状态无关。也有适度的证据表明,较高的构建频率可以提供较短的总固定持续时间,但仅适用于响应分布的较低十分位数。(构式-初始)头名词的注视次数也随着构式频率的增加和头名词出现频率的增加而减少。头名词的第二次注视时间也显示了词汇状态的影响,句法结构在第5和第7十分位的注视时间较短。注视介词的概率随介词使用频率的增加而降低,但首次注视介词的概率随介词使用频率的增加而增加。葡萄牙语是介词最丰富的语言,它的介词比法语和西班牙语的介词得到了更多的关注。观察到的结果模式与词汇加工模型是一致的,在这种模型中,阅读是由高级结构知识和关键成分(如头名词和介词)的知识指导的。
期刊介绍:
The Mental Lexicon is an interdisciplinary journal that provides an international forum for research that bears on the issues of the representation and processing of words in the mind and brain. We encourage both the submission of original research and reviews of significant new developments in the understanding of the mental lexicon. The journal publishes work that includes, but is not limited to the following: Models of the representation of words in the mind Computational models of lexical access and production Experimental investigations of lexical processing Neurolinguistic studies of lexical impairment. Functional neuroimaging and lexical representation in the brain Lexical development across the lifespan Lexical processing in second language acquisition The bilingual mental lexicon Lexical and morphological structure across languages Formal models of lexical structure Corpus research on the lexicon New experimental paradigms and statistical techniques for mental lexicon research.