The Interaction of Functional Predictors and the Mechanical Predictor Perseveration in a Variationist Analysis of Caribbean Spanish Heritage Speaker Subject Pronoun Expression

Subject pronoun expression (SPE) in Spanish has been widely studied across monolingual and bilingual varieties, showing a consistent effect of functional predictors. In recent papers, the role of the mechanical predictor priming, or perseveration, has been the source of debate. Additionally, little...

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Main Author: Ana de Prada Pérez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-10-01
Series:Languages
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2226-471X/5/4/36
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spelling doaj-f97172ee38024df0a6735d9f2e5692bf2020-11-25T03:57:42ZengMDPI AGLanguages2226-471X2020-10-015363610.3390/languages5040036The Interaction of Functional Predictors and the Mechanical Predictor Perseveration in a Variationist Analysis of Caribbean Spanish Heritage Speaker Subject Pronoun ExpressionAna de Prada Pérez0Department of Spanish and Latin American Studies, Maynooth University, W23 F2K8 Maynooth, IrelandSubject pronoun expression (SPE) in Spanish has been widely studied across monolingual and bilingual varieties, showing a consistent effect of functional predictors. In recent papers, the role of the mechanical predictor priming, or perseveration, has been the source of debate. Additionally, little is known about the interaction of perseveration and significant functional predictors (e.g., grammatical person). In this paper, we expand on previous research by examining first-person singular (1sg) and third-person singular (3sg) data from sociolinguistic interviews with Spanish–English bilinguals from Florida to explore the possible difference in priming in deictic vs. referential subjects. The results from a mixed-effects variable rule analysis only offered clear evidence of priming in 1sg. We hypothesize that this result could be due to either surprisal (1sg overt pronominal subjects are rarer in the corpus that 3sg overt pronominal subjects) or to 3sg involving reference-tracking and perseveration only being evident in contexts where the subject form does not signal for pragmatic content.https://www.mdpi.com/2226-471X/5/4/36subject pronoun expressionperseverationpriming
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ana de Prada Pérez
spellingShingle Ana de Prada Pérez
The Interaction of Functional Predictors and the Mechanical Predictor Perseveration in a Variationist Analysis of Caribbean Spanish Heritage Speaker Subject Pronoun Expression
Languages
subject pronoun expression
perseveration
priming
author_facet Ana de Prada Pérez
author_sort Ana de Prada Pérez
title The Interaction of Functional Predictors and the Mechanical Predictor Perseveration in a Variationist Analysis of Caribbean Spanish Heritage Speaker Subject Pronoun Expression
title_short The Interaction of Functional Predictors and the Mechanical Predictor Perseveration in a Variationist Analysis of Caribbean Spanish Heritage Speaker Subject Pronoun Expression
title_full The Interaction of Functional Predictors and the Mechanical Predictor Perseveration in a Variationist Analysis of Caribbean Spanish Heritage Speaker Subject Pronoun Expression
title_fullStr The Interaction of Functional Predictors and the Mechanical Predictor Perseveration in a Variationist Analysis of Caribbean Spanish Heritage Speaker Subject Pronoun Expression
title_full_unstemmed The Interaction of Functional Predictors and the Mechanical Predictor Perseveration in a Variationist Analysis of Caribbean Spanish Heritage Speaker Subject Pronoun Expression
title_sort interaction of functional predictors and the mechanical predictor perseveration in a variationist analysis of caribbean spanish heritage speaker subject pronoun expression
publisher MDPI AG
series Languages
issn 2226-471X
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Subject pronoun expression (SPE) in Spanish has been widely studied across monolingual and bilingual varieties, showing a consistent effect of functional predictors. In recent papers, the role of the mechanical predictor priming, or perseveration, has been the source of debate. Additionally, little is known about the interaction of perseveration and significant functional predictors (e.g., grammatical person). In this paper, we expand on previous research by examining first-person singular (1sg) and third-person singular (3sg) data from sociolinguistic interviews with Spanish–English bilinguals from Florida to explore the possible difference in priming in deictic vs. referential subjects. The results from a mixed-effects variable rule analysis only offered clear evidence of priming in 1sg. We hypothesize that this result could be due to either surprisal (1sg overt pronominal subjects are rarer in the corpus that 3sg overt pronominal subjects) or to 3sg involving reference-tracking and perseveration only being evident in contexts where the subject form does not signal for pragmatic content.
topic subject pronoun expression
perseveration
priming
url https://www.mdpi.com/2226-471X/5/4/36
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AT anadepradaperez interactionoffunctionalpredictorsandthemechanicalpredictorperseverationinavariationistanalysisofcaribbeanspanishheritagespeakersubjectpronounexpression
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