Context, you need: Experimental approaches to information structure processing
Research output: Book/Report › Ph.D. thesis › Research
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Context, you need : Experimental approaches to information structure processing. / Kristensen, Line Burholt.
Det Humanistiske Fakultet, Københavns Universitet, 2013. 193 p.Research output: Book/Report › Ph.D. thesis › Research
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TY - BOOK
T1 - Context, you need
T2 - Experimental approaches to information structure processing
AU - Kristensen, Line Burholt
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Two clauses can contain the same information, yet display differences with respect to information structure. As an example, “He invited her” and “Her, he invited” contain the same information, but display syntactic differences. Previous language experiments, e.g. from German and English, have shown that object-initial clauses like “Her, he invited” are more difficult to read and comprehend than subject-initial clauses like “He invited her”. Neuroimaging studies have shown that the difference particularly affects a brain area known by the name of Broca’s area. Whether one says “He invited her” or “Her, he invited” depends on the context – it is therefore relevant to take contextual factors into account when examining how language users process information structure. The dissertation is based on a psycholinguistic reading experiment and three neuroimaging experiments that all examine the interplay between context and information structure. The experimental results indicate that context plays a significant role when it comes to sentence comprehension and that the activity in Broca’s area is also affected by contextual factors. Based on the results of the four language experiments, it is also argued that linguistic processing is based on general cognitive functions (as opposed to isolated linguistic modules), and that the recipient’s ability to predict future input and attend to salient parts of a sentence are central to sentence processing.
AB - Two clauses can contain the same information, yet display differences with respect to information structure. As an example, “He invited her” and “Her, he invited” contain the same information, but display syntactic differences. Previous language experiments, e.g. from German and English, have shown that object-initial clauses like “Her, he invited” are more difficult to read and comprehend than subject-initial clauses like “He invited her”. Neuroimaging studies have shown that the difference particularly affects a brain area known by the name of Broca’s area. Whether one says “He invited her” or “Her, he invited” depends on the context – it is therefore relevant to take contextual factors into account when examining how language users process information structure. The dissertation is based on a psycholinguistic reading experiment and three neuroimaging experiments that all examine the interplay between context and information structure. The experimental results indicate that context plays a significant role when it comes to sentence comprehension and that the activity in Broca’s area is also affected by contextual factors. Based on the results of the four language experiments, it is also argued that linguistic processing is based on general cognitive functions (as opposed to isolated linguistic modules), and that the recipient’s ability to predict future input and attend to salient parts of a sentence are central to sentence processing.
M3 - Ph.D. thesis
BT - Context, you need
PB - Det Humanistiske Fakultet, Københavns Universitet
ER -
ID: 44660887