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Syntactic and discourse-level constraints in native and non-native pronoun resolution

Subject Area General and Comparative Linguistics, Experimental Linguistics, Typology, Non-European Languages
Term from 2014 to 2019
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 254826349
 
Establishing referential links between pronouns and their antecedents as quickly and as accurately as possible is vital for successful sentence and discourse comprehension. Yet the nature of the mental mechanisms involved, and the types of constraint which guide the antecedent search, are still not fully understood. Both linguistic and psycholinguistic models of anaphor resolution have almost exclusively been informed by data from adult native speakers, and the vast majority of online processing studies have investigated English. Current hypotheses about the time-course of pronoun resolution differ with regard to the questions of when during processing syntactic and discourse-level constraints come into play, and how they interact over time.This project will investigate and compare the timing of syntactic and discourse-level constraints during native and non-native pronoun resolution in German, with the aim of testing the cross-linguistic and cross-population validity of current theoretical models and hypotheses about real-time anaphor resolution. The project thus falls within the XPrag priority programme's core area "models for pragmatic phenomena" and also meets the programme's aim of extending the investigation of pragmatic phenomena to non-standard populations. Data from native and non-native speakers will be compared in order to test the robustness of, and help improve, existing models of anaphor resolution.A time-course sensitive experimental method, eye-movement monitoring during reading, will be used to examine whether and when during processing syntactic and/or discourse-level information constrain the search for an antecedent. Non-native speakers have often shown reduced or delayed sensitivity to syntactic information during processing, which is predicted to lead to a greater reliance on discourse-level information during non-native compared to native anaphor resolution. Possible differences in the use or relative timing of syntactic and discourse-level constraints across different populations would call the universal validity of existing models of pronoun resolution into question, while at the same time providing evidence for the underlying representational and/or computational systems' modularity. The results from this project will help advance our understanding of the mental architecture, mechanisms and linguistic representations that underlie real-time pronoun resolution. Findings from the project will have implications both for theoretical linguistic approaches to pronoun resolution and for current processing models, and will also be of interest to researchers in the field of non-native language acquisition.
DFG Programme Priority Programmes
 
 

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