Subject-Verb Agreement in Children and Adults: Serial or Hierarchical Processing?

被引:0
|
作者
Isabelle Negro
Lucile Chanquoy
Michel Fayol
Maryse Louis-Sidney
机构
[1] Université des Antilles-Guyane,Faculté des Lettres et Sciences Humaines
[2] Université de Nice,undefined
[3] Université de Clermont-Ferrand,undefined
[4] Université des Antilles-Guyane,undefined
[5] Université Antilles-Guyane: Martinique,undefined
来源
关键词
attraction errors; developmental perspective; serial or hierarchical account; subject-verb agreement;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Two processes, serial and hierarchical, are generally opposed to account for grammatical encoding in language production. In a developmental perspective, the question addressed here is whether the subject-verb agreement during writing is computed serially, once the words are linearly ordered in the sentence, or hierarchically, as soon as the number features are determined in a hierarchical frame. Adults and children from 3rd to 5th grades were requested to listen to sentences with built-in prepositional phrases or relative clauses and to transcribe them as quickly as possible. A serial hypothesis assumes that subject-verb agreement errors should be equally frequent with both preambles because each has the same length separating the subject head noun and the main verb. Conversely, according to a hierarchical view, errors should be more frequent with a prepositional phrase because the syntactic distance between the subject and the verb is greater than with a relative clause. The results revealed a main effect of the preamble manipulated in 5th graders and adults, but not in 3rd graders. These data were in favor of a hierarchical processing in older writers and a serial one in younger children. However, in 3rd grade, we assumed that the potential serial account was a result of the resource constraint on writing more than of a real serial processing of the agreement.
引用
收藏
页码:233 / 258
页数:25
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Effects of Type of Agreement Violation and Utterance Position on the Auditory Processing of Subject-Verb Agreement: An ERP Study
    Dube, Sithembinkosi
    Kung, Carmen
    Peter, Varghese
    Brock, Jon
    Demuth, Katherine
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2016, 7
  • [42] What makes syntactic processing of subject-verb agreement complex? The effects of distance and additional agreement features
    Rispens, Judith
    de Amesti, Vicente Soto
    LANGUAGE SCIENCES, 2017, 60 : 160 - 172
  • [43] Subject-Verb Number Agreement in Bilingual Processing: (Lack of) Age of Acquisition and Proficiency Effects
    Sagarra, Nuria
    Rodriguez, Nicole
    LANGUAGES, 2022, 7 (01)
  • [44] Task Demands and 'Depth' of L2 Processing of Subject-Verb Number Agreement
    Wen, Zhijun
    Schwartz, Bonnie D.
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 36TH ANNUAL BOSTON UNIVERSITY CONFERENCE ON LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT, VOLS 1 AND 2, 2012, : 673 - 685
  • [45] The use of subject-verb agreement and verb argument structure in monolingual and bilingual children with specific language impairment
    Spoelman, Marianne
    Bol, Gerard W.
    CLINICAL LINGUISTICS & PHONETICS, 2012, 26 (04) : 357 - 379
  • [46] The neurocognitive processing mechanism of English subject-verb agreement by Chinese-speaking learners
    Wu, Mingjun
    Li, Miaomiao
    Wu, Di
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2024, 15
  • [47] Maintenance Cost in the Processing of Subject-Verb Dependencies
    Ristic, Bojana
    Mancini, Simona
    Molinaro, Nicola
    Staub, Adrian
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-LEARNING MEMORY AND COGNITION, 2022, 48 (06) : 829 - 838
  • [48] The acquisition of subject-verb agreement in FL2: The influence of the type of verb and subject products
    Michot, Marie-Eve
    4E CONGRES MONDIAL DE LINGUISTIQUE FRANCAISE, 2014, 8 : 1537 - 1550
  • [49] Agreeing to disagree: Deaf and hearing children's awareness of subject-verb number agreement
    Breadmore, Helen L.
    Krott, Andrea
    Olson, Andrew C.
    QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2014, 67 (03): : 474 - 498
  • [50] Children's Production of Subject-Verb Agreement in Hebrew When Gender and Context are Ambiguous
    Karniol, Rachel
    Artzi, Sigal
    Ludmer, Maya
    JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLINGUISTIC RESEARCH, 2016, 45 (06) : 1515 - 1532