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      The Role of Animacy and Structural Information in Relative Clause Attachment: Evidence From Chinese

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          Abstract

          We report one production and one comprehension experiment investigating the effect of animacy in relative clause attachment in Chinese. Experiment 1 involved a fill-in-the-blank task that manipulated the order of an animate noun phrase in a complex NP construction. The results showed that while low attachment responses exceeded high attachment responses overall (cf. Shen, 2006), a tendency exists to attach a relative clause to an animate NP in Chinese (cf. Desmet et al., 2002). Experiment 2 used a rating task to examine the interplay between animacy and structural information by manipulating the order of the animate NP as well as the relative clause type (i.e., subject vs. object relative clauses). The results showed that the animate NP modification tendency found in Experiment 1 was limited to subject-relative clauses and that no animacy-related effect was found with object-relative clauses. These results are incompatible with purely structural parsing strategies such as Late Closure (Frazier, 1987) and the Predicate Proximity Principle (Gibson et al., 1996). Instead, the current results suggest that attachment ambiguity resolution in Chinese relative clauses is sensitive to animacy as well as structural information.

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          Cross-linguistic differences in parsing: restrictions on the use of the Late Closure strategy in Spanish.

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            Processing relative clauses in Chinese.

            This paper reports results from a self-paced reading study in Chinese that demonstrates that object-extracted relative clause structures are less complex than corresponding subject-extracted structures. These results contrast with results from processing other Subject-Verb-Object languages like English, in which object-extracted structures are more complex than subject-extracted structures. A key word-order difference between Chinese and other Subject-Verb-Object languages is that Chinese relative clauses precede their head nouns. Because of this word order difference, the results follow from a resource-based theory of sentence complexity, according to which there is a storage cost associated with predicting syntactic heads in order to form a grammatical sentence. The results are also consistent with a theory according to which people have less difficulty processing embedded clauses whose word order matches the word order in main clauses. Some corpus analyses of Chinese texts provide results that constrain the classes of possible frequency-based theories. Critically, these results demonstrate that there is nothing intrinsically easy about extracting from subject position: depending on the word order in the main clause and in a relative clause, extraction from object position can be easier to process in some circumstances.
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              Processing Chinese relative clauses in context

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Front Psychol
                Front Psychol
                Front. Psychol.
                Frontiers in Psychology
                Frontiers Media S.A.
                1664-1078
                17 July 2019
                2019
                : 10
                : 1576
                Affiliations
                [1] 1Department of English Language & Literature, Konkuk University , Seoul, South Korea
                [2] 2School of Foreign Languages, Shandong Jianzhu University , Jinan, China
                Author notes

                Edited by: Matthew Wagers, University of California, Santa Cruz, United States

                Reviewed by: Margaret Grant, Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany; Ming Xiang, University of Chicago, United States

                *Correspondence: Nayoung Kwon nayoung.kw@ 123456gmail.com

                This article was submitted to Language Sciences, a section of the journal Frontiers in Psychology

                Article
                10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01576
                6650783
                31379652
                5bbc4a12-2854-41de-bf62-a16f751b8050
                Copyright © 2019 Kwon, Ong, Chen and Zhang.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

                History
                : 13 August 2018
                : 21 June 2019
                Page count
                Figures: 2, Tables: 7, Equations: 0, References: 69, Pages: 12, Words: 10299
                Categories
                Psychology
                Original Research

                Clinical Psychology & Psychiatry
                animacy,chinese,relative clause,attachment ambiguity,sr/or asymmetry

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