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Publication Date:
September 2008
ISSN:
1613-3641
DOI:
10.1515/COGL.2008.016

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Lexical chunking effects in syntactic processing

Arne Zeschel1

1 Universität Bremen, Germany

c1Author e-mail: .

Citation Information: Cognitive Linguistics. Volume 19, Issue 3, Pages 427–446, ISSN (Online) 1613-3641, ISSN (Print) 0936-5907, DOI: 10.1515/COGL.2008.016, September 2008

Publication History:
Received:
2007-11-29
Revised:
2008-01-25
Published Online:
2008-09-01

Abstract

Research on syntactic ambiguity resolution in language comprehension has shown that subjects' processing decisions are influenced by a variety of heterogeneous factors such as e.g., syntactic complexity, semantic fit and the discourse frequency of the competing structures. The present paper investigates a further potentially relevant factor in such processes: effects of syntagmatic lexical chunking (or matching to a complex memorized prefab) whose occurrence would be predicted from usage-based assumptions about linguistic categorisation. Focusing on the widely studied so-called DO/SC-ambiguity in which a post-verbal NP is syntactically ambiguous between a direct object and the subject of an embedded clause, potentially biasing collocational chunks of the relevant type are identified in a number of corpus-linguistic pretests and then investigated in a self-paced reading experiment. The results show a significant increase in processing difficulty from a collocationally neutral over a lexically biasing to a strongly biasing condition. This suggests that syntagmatically complex and partially schematic templates of the kind envisioned in usage-based Construction Grammar may impinge on speakers' online processing decisions during sentence comprehension.

Keywords:: Sentence processing; prefabs; usage-based model

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