Title of article
Conceptual structure modulates structural priming in the production of complex sentences
Author/Authors
Griffin، Zenzi M. نويسنده , , Weinstein-Tull، Justin نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
-536
From page
537
To page
0
Abstract
Speakers tend to reproduce syntactic structures that they have recently comprehended or produced. This structural or syntactic priming occurs despite differences in the particular conceptual or event roles expressed in prime and target sentences ([Bock and Loebell, 1990]). In two sentence recall studies, we used the tendency of speakers to paraphrase the finite complements of object-raising verbs as infinitive complements (e.g., "John believed that Mary was nice" as "John believed Mary to be nice") to test whether an additional conceptual role would affect priming. Prime constructions with identical constituent orders as object-raising infinitives but an additional conceptual role ("John persuaded Mary to be nice") resulted in fewer paraphrases. Contrasts with other constructions suggest that the critical difference between primes was this extra conceptual role. Thus, subtle differences in conceptual structures can affect how speakers grammatically encode message elements.
Keywords
Language production , Structural priming , Syntax , Semantics , Message planning , Sentence recall
Journal title
Journal of Memory and Language
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Journal of Memory and Language
Record number
65783
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