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The neurophysiology of grammatical constraints : ERP studies on the influence of prosody and pragmatics on the processing of syntax and morphology in Swedish

Roll, Mikael LU (2009)
Abstract
This dissertation investigates the interaction of information from word order, morphology, lexical semantics, and prosody in the on-line processing of Swedish sentences using Event-Related Potentials.

Study I examines how the form, meaning, and syntactic position of objects influence their interpretation in ‘Object Shift’ contexts. In Swedish, object pronouns can either follow or precede sentence adverbs. Following a sentence adverb, pronouns are associated with sentence stress and may express inaccessible referents. Preceding the sentence adverb, they are clitics, and can only have accessible referents. Nouns cannot be clitics in Swedish and thus always follow sentence adverbs. In study I, sentence adverbs illicitly following... (More)
This dissertation investigates the interaction of information from word order, morphology, lexical semantics, and prosody in the on-line processing of Swedish sentences using Event-Related Potentials.

Study I examines how the form, meaning, and syntactic position of objects influence their interpretation in ‘Object Shift’ contexts. In Swedish, object pronouns can either follow or precede sentence adverbs. Following a sentence adverb, pronouns are associated with sentence stress and may express inaccessible referents. Preceding the sentence adverb, they are clitics, and can only have accessible referents. Nouns cannot be clitics in Swedish and thus always follow sentence adverbs. In study I, sentence adverbs illicitly following nouns yielded a P600, showing difficulty in structural integration. After indefinite nouns, sentence adverbs also produced an early negativity, hinting at a pragmatic complication.

Studies II and III investigate the interaction of verb semantics, word order, and intonation in the interpretation of assertive force. Swedish assertive main clauses differ from subordinate clauses due to their post-verbal sentence adverbs and the presence of a left-edge boundary tone. After neutral verbs like ‘say,’ embedded main clauses are often used instead of subordinate clauses in order to express assertions. This is not possible with verbs like ‘hope,’ which question the truth of their complement. In the experiments, sentence adverbs in embedded clauses increased structural integration cost, as seen in a P600. The effect was greatest in embedded main clauses, where embedding verbs like ‘hope’ further increased the P600, while left-edge boundary tones reduced the effect.

Study IV examines Swedish word accents and morphology processing. Incorrect declension suffixes gave rise to N400 and P600 effects, showing influence on semantic processing as well as difficulty in integrating illicit suffixes into the word structure. Previous research has shown that Swedish word accents are conditioned by suffixes. In Study IV, Accent 2-inducing suffixes combined with stems associated with Accent 1 yielded a P600 effect, showing difficulty in processing the word structure. (Less)
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author
supervisor
opponent
  • professor Alter, Kai, Institute of Neuroscience, Newcastle University, England
organization
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
linguistics, event-related potentials, ERP, pragmatics, language processing, prosody, syntax
pages
166 pages
publisher
Lund University
defense location
Pangea (hörsal 229), Geocentrum II, Sölvegatan 12, Lund
defense date
2009-10-16 13:15:00
ISBN
978-91-628-7881-8
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
The information about affiliations in this record was updated in December 2015. The record was previously connected to the following departments: Centre for Languages and Literature (015016000), Linguistics and Phonetics (015010003)
id
f0de0ea0-d678-4bf2-b971-42e88e2a805d (old id 1470444)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 10:07:24
date last changed
2020-12-04 11:10:46
@phdthesis{f0de0ea0-d678-4bf2-b971-42e88e2a805d,
  abstract     = {{This dissertation investigates the interaction of information from word order, morphology, lexical semantics, and prosody in the on-line processing of Swedish sentences using Event-Related Potentials.<br/><br>
Study I examines how the form, meaning, and syntactic position of objects influence their interpretation in ‘Object Shift’ contexts. In Swedish, object pronouns can either follow or precede sentence adverbs. Following a sentence adverb, pronouns are associated with sentence stress and may express inaccessible referents. Preceding the sentence adverb, they are clitics, and can only have accessible referents. Nouns cannot be clitics in Swedish and thus always follow sentence adverbs. In study I, sentence adverbs illicitly following nouns yielded a P600, showing difficulty in structural integration. After indefinite nouns, sentence adverbs also produced an early negativity, hinting at a pragmatic complication.<br/><br>
Studies II and III investigate the interaction of verb semantics, word order, and intonation in the interpretation of assertive force. Swedish assertive main clauses differ from subordinate clauses due to their post-verbal sentence adverbs and the presence of a left-edge boundary tone. After neutral verbs like ‘say,’ embedded main clauses are often used instead of subordinate clauses in order to express assertions. This is not possible with verbs like ‘hope,’ which question the truth of their complement. In the experiments, sentence adverbs in embedded clauses increased structural integration cost, as seen in a P600. The effect was greatest in embedded main clauses, where embedding verbs like ‘hope’ further increased the P600, while left-edge boundary tones reduced the effect.<br/><br>
Study IV examines Swedish word accents and morphology processing. Incorrect declension suffixes gave rise to N400 and P600 effects, showing influence on semantic processing as well as difficulty in integrating illicit suffixes into the word structure. Previous research has shown that Swedish word accents are conditioned by suffixes. In Study IV, Accent 2-inducing suffixes combined with stems associated with Accent 1 yielded a P600 effect, showing difficulty in processing the word structure.}},
  author       = {{Roll, Mikael}},
  isbn         = {{978-91-628-7881-8}},
  keywords     = {{linguistics; event-related potentials; ERP; pragmatics; language processing; prosody; syntax}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Lund University}},
  school       = {{Lund University}},
  title        = {{The neurophysiology of grammatical constraints : ERP studies on the influence of prosody and pragmatics on the processing of syntax and morphology in Swedish}},
  year         = {{2009}},
}