Title of article
Disambiguating the scope of negation by prosodic cues in three varieties of German
Author/Authors
Stefan Baumann، نويسنده , , Tamara Rathcke، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
20
From page
29
To page
48
Abstract
Abstract Two perception experiments were conducted with subjects from Kiel, Düsseldorf and Vienna to investigate the role prosody plays (a) in resolving scope of negation ambiguities and (b) in judging the strength of phrasal breaks in German. The prosodic means tested were pause, intonation contour and peak alignment. Results reveal that the relevance of the cues varies depending on the task: for the (semantic) scope disambiguation task, intonation contour proves to be the most decisive factor, whereas presence of pause turns out to be most influential for the (metalinguistic) phrasing task. This result implies that the question of how German listeners resolve scope ambiguities cannot simply be attributed to the presence or absence of a phrasal break between a main and a subordinate clause. It rather seems to depend on a more general perception of ‘cohesion’ between the two clauses as indicated by prosodic means. Flat hat contours and late peak alignment patterns lead to a higher level of cohesion and an increase in wide scope interpretations, whereas pointed hats with early peak accents are typical of narrow scope readings. The results further reveal a significant difference between the varieties due to an increased number of narrow scope readings in Viennese listeners. Since Viennese German displays later peaks than Northern varieties, this outcome suggests that Viennese subjects interpret (late) peaks as earlier than listeners from Kiel and Düsseldorf.
Keywords
Scope of negation , Prosody , German varieties , Perception , Peak alignment , Phrasing
Journal title
Lingua(International Review of General Linguistics)
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
Lingua(International Review of General Linguistics)
Record number
1291286
Link To Document