Abstract

Syntactic priming is known to facilitate comprehension of the target sentence if the syntactic structure of the target sentence aligns with the structure of the prime (Branigan et al., 2005; Tooley and Traxler, 2010). Such a processing facilitation is understood to be constrained due to factors such as lexical overlap between the prime and the target, frequency of the prime structure, etc. Syntactic priming in SOV languages is also understood to be influenced by similar constraints (Arai, 2012). Sentence comprehension in SOV languages is known to be incremental and predictive. Such a top-down parsing process involves establishing various syntactic relations based on the linguistic cues of a sentence and the role of preverbal case-markers in achieving this is known to be critical. Given the evidence of syntactic priming during comprehension in these languages, this aspect of the comprehension process and its effect on syntactic priming becomes important. In this work, we show that syntactic priming during comprehension is affected by the probability of using the prime structure while parsing the target sentence. If the prime structure has a low probability given the sentential cues (e.g., nominal case-markers) in the target sentence, then the chances of persisting with the prime structure in the target reduces. Our work demonstrates the role of structural complexity of the target with regard to syntactic priming during comprehension and highlights that syntactic priming is modulated by an overarching preference of the parser to avoid rare structures.

Highlights

  • Syntactic priming has been one of the most enduring effects attested in the sentence processing literature

  • Results show that in the Non-finite Prime condition, the number of intransitive non-finite verb completions was more compared to the Noun Prime condition (z = −4.78)

  • A key contribution of our work is that it highlights certain constraints on syntactic priming in an SOV language like Hindi

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Summary

Introduction

Syntactic priming (or syntactic persistence) has been one of the most enduring effects attested in the sentence processing literature. Using a picture description task, Bock (1986) showed that English native speakers were systematically influenced by the abstract syntactic structure of an unrelated sentence they read out loud, prior to attending a picture. Since this landmark work, syntactic priming has been shown in numerous studies (Bock, 1989; Bock and Loebell, 1990; Bock et al, 1992; Pickering and Branigan, 1998; Ferreira, 2003; Scheepers, 2003). Using a picture description task, Tanaka et al (2009) showed that Japanese native speakers were more likely to describe a picture using a passive structure if they had been exposed to a passive prime such as 1b, compared to seeing an active prime such as 1a

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