Abstract

Much work has demonstrated that speakers of verb-final languages are able to construct rich syntactic representations in advance of verb information. This may reflect general architectural properties of the language processor, or it may only reflect a language-specific adaptation to the demands of verb-finality. The present study addresses this issue by examining whether speakers of a verb-medial language (English) wait to consult verb transitivity information before constructing filler-gap dependencies, where internal arguments are fronted and hence precede the verb. This configuration makes it possible to investigate whether the parser actively makes representational commitments on the gap position before verb transitivity information becomes available. A key prediction of the view that rich pre-verbal structure building is a general architectural property is that speakers of verb-medial languages should predictively construct dependencies in advance of verb transitivity information, and therefore that disruption should be observed when the verb has intransitive subcategorization frames that are incompatible with the predicted structure. In three reading experiments (self-paced and eye-tracking) that manipulated verb transitivity, we found evidence for reading disruption when the verb was intransitive, although no such reading difficulty was observed when the critical verb was embedded inside a syntactic island structure, which blocks filler-gap dependency completion. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that in English, as in verb-final languages, information from preverbal noun phrases is sufficient to trigger active dependency completion without having access to verb transitivity information.

Highlights

  • A leading goal of sentence processing research is to understand how the parser adapts to a multitude of linguistic differences across languages to enable successful comprehension

  • This contrast is consistent with the hyper-active gap filling hypothesis, which states that the parser creates an object gap and integrates the filler into the object position before having access to verb transitivity information

  • Under the hyperactive gap filling account, prior to the verb the reader analyzes the filler as a direct object of the upcoming verb, and given the combination of the subject noun phrase (NP) and the hypothesized object NP, the reader may already expect a certain class of transitive verbs that would be semantically compatible with the filler NP

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Summary

Introduction

A leading goal of sentence processing research is to understand how the parser adapts to a multitude of linguistic differences across languages to enable successful comprehension. In this regard, comparisons of verb-medial and verb-final languages have provided a valuable source of evidence (Mazuka and Lust, 1990; Inoue and Fodor, 1995). Stowe (1986) observed the so-called Filled gap effect in (2), i.e., slower reading times at the direct object position us in the wh-fronting condition (2a) than in a control condition that did not involve wh-fronting (2b) This pattern of reading times suggests that the parser had already posited a gap following the transitive verb, before checking whether the direct object position was occupied. Converging evidence comes from an eye-tracking experiment by Traxler and Pickering (1996), who manipulated the thematic fit between the filler and the potential verb host, as in (3)

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