TY - JOUR
T1 - Priming Center-Embedded Object and Extraposed Subject Relative Clauses in Persian Language Production
T2 - Searching for Persistence of Hierarchical Configuration
AU - Rafiee Fazel, Amirabbas
AU - Golfam, Arsalan
AU - Ameri, Hayat
AU - Bahrami-Khorshid, Sahar
AU - Safavimanesh, Farzaneh
N1 - © 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2023/8
Y1 - 2023/8
N2 - Substantial evidence suggests that priming can co-occur at different syntactic and nonsyntactic levels. In this study, we further explore two loci of priming concerned with hierarchical configuration and thematic information using relative clause (RC) constructions. In a comprehension-to-production task, Persian speakers (42 adults and 42 children) described pictures after hearing extraposed subject or center-embedded object RCs containing the same or different verbs. We ask whether priming the object RC mitigates the computational cost of center-embedding and thus increases the subsequent production of this infrequent structure. We also measured persistence effects associated with the assignment of emphasis to thematic roles, examining whether a particular portrayal of an event is captured and reproduced (e.g., foregrounding the patient). Although this study could not establish any significant priming effects in the production of the center-embedded object RC, we observed that adults used this construction more in the same verbs condition. The overall results instead revealed strong evidence for thematic emphasis persistence, such that patient-emphasis object relatives further elicited functionally equivalent RC constructions. We discuss priming of hierarchical configuration as a candidate locus and explain the activation of functional information from the speaker's perspective.
AB - Substantial evidence suggests that priming can co-occur at different syntactic and nonsyntactic levels. In this study, we further explore two loci of priming concerned with hierarchical configuration and thematic information using relative clause (RC) constructions. In a comprehension-to-production task, Persian speakers (42 adults and 42 children) described pictures after hearing extraposed subject or center-embedded object RCs containing the same or different verbs. We ask whether priming the object RC mitigates the computational cost of center-embedding and thus increases the subsequent production of this infrequent structure. We also measured persistence effects associated with the assignment of emphasis to thematic roles, examining whether a particular portrayal of an event is captured and reproduced (e.g., foregrounding the patient). Although this study could not establish any significant priming effects in the production of the center-embedded object RC, we observed that adults used this construction more in the same verbs condition. The overall results instead revealed strong evidence for thematic emphasis persistence, such that patient-emphasis object relatives further elicited functionally equivalent RC constructions. We discuss priming of hierarchical configuration as a candidate locus and explain the activation of functional information from the speaker's perspective.
KW - Adult
KW - Child
KW - Comprehension
KW - Hearing
KW - Humans
KW - Language
KW - Persian
KW - Thematic emphasis
KW - Structural priming
KW - Hierarchical configuration
KW - Relative clauses
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85149073147&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s10936-022-09922-3
DO - 10.1007/s10936-022-09922-3
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 36856897
SN - 0090-6905
VL - 52
SP - 1289
EP - 1324
JO - Journal of psycholinguistic research
JF - Journal of psycholinguistic research
IS - 4
ER -