Abstract
This study tested American preschoolers' ability to use phrasal prosody to constrain their syntactic analysis of locally ambiguous sentences containing noun/verb homophones (e.g., [The baby flies] [hide in the shadows] vs [The baby] [flies his kite], brackets indicate prosodic boundaries). The words following the homophone were masked, such that prosodic cues were the only disambiguating information. In an oral completion task, 4- to 5-year-olds successfully exploited the sentence's prosodic structure to assign the appropriate syntactic category to the target word, mirroring previous results in French (but challenging previous English-language results) and providing cross-linguistic evidence for the role of phrasal prosody in children's syntactic analysis.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | EL216-EL222 |
| Number of pages | 7 |
| Journal | Journal of the Acoustical Society of America |
| Volume | 139 |
| Issue number | 6 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 2016 |
Keywords
- computational linguistics
- language acquisition
- preschool children
- prosodic analysis (linguistics)
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