Abstract

In a reading production experiment we investigate the impact of punctuation and discourse structure on the prosodic differentiation of right dislocation (RD) and afterthought (AT). Both discourse structure and punctuation are likely to affect the prosodic marking of these right-peripheral constructions, as certain prosodic markings are appropriate only in certain discourse structures, and punctuation is said to correlate with prosodic phrasing. With RD and AT clearly differing in discourse function (comment-topic structuring vs. disambiguation) and punctuation (comma vs. full stop), critical items in this study were manipulated with regard to the (mis-)match of these parameters. Since RD and AT are said to prosodically differ in pitch range, phrasing, and accentuation patterns, we measured the reduction of pitch range, boundary strength and prominence level. Results show an effect of both punctuation and discourse context (mediated by syntax) on phrasing and accentuation. Interestingly, for pitch range reduction no difference between RDs and ATs could be observed. Our results corroborate a language architecture model in which punctuation, prosody, syntax, and discourse-semantics are independent but interacting domains with correspondence constraints between them. Our findings suggest there are tight correspondence constraints between (i) punctuation (full stop and comma in particular) and syntax, (ii) prosody and syntax as well as (iii) prosody and discourse-semantics.

Highlights

  • Right dislocation (RD) and afterthought (AT) are two constructions at the right sentence periphery which have often been confused in previous research

  • We will start with the presentation of the filler items, since they served as a baseline measure for the impact of punctuation on prosody

  • This was supported by our linear mixed effects model where punctuation mark entered as factor and random intercepts were used for speaker and item

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of our current study is to investigate whether prosodic differences in RD and AT are triggered by punctuation or discourse structure

Results
Discussion
Conclusion
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