The influence of syntactic category and semantic constraints on lexical ambiguity resolution: An eye-movement study of processing Chinese homographs
碩士 === 國立政治大學 === 語言學研究所 === 102 === Two primary sentence processing models have been proposed to account for the interaction between syntactic and semantic information in reading sentences: Syntax-first models assume that syntactic-category assignment must precede semantic analysis, while constrain...
Main Authors: | , |
---|---|
Other Authors: | |
Format: | Others |
Language: | en_US |
Online Access: | http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/4keca5 |
id |
ndltd-TW-102NCCU5462006 |
---|---|
record_format |
oai_dc |
spelling |
ndltd-TW-102NCCU54620062019-05-15T21:31:55Z http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/4keca5 The influence of syntactic category and semantic constraints on lexical ambiguity resolution: An eye-movement study of processing Chinese homographs 詞性及語意限制對詞彙歧義解困的影響:中文歧義詞處理的眼動研究 Chen, Po Heng 陳柏亨 碩士 國立政治大學 語言學研究所 102 Two primary sentence processing models have been proposed to account for the interaction between syntactic and semantic information in reading sentences: Syntax-first models assume that syntactic-category assignment must precede semantic analysis, while constraint-satisfaction models propose that information from different sources is processed and weighed at the same time during sentence comprehension. The present study examined whether these sentence processing models, which assume different contribution of syntactic category and semantic context, can explain the resolution of lexical ambiguity in sentences. Several eye movement studies have demonstrated the subordinate bias effect (SBE) for lexical-semantic ambiguous words (i.e., NN/VV homographs), indicating that a subordinate-biased semantic context can boost the activation of the subordinate meaning of ambiguous words and causes meaning competition (Duffy, Morris, &; Rayner, 1988). However, the role of syntactic context in lexical ambiguity resolution is less clear. Syntactic category ambiguous words (i.e., SCA words; VN/NV homographs), whose alternative meanings differ in syntactic category (e.g., watch in English), serve as a means of examining the interaction between syntactic category and semantic constraints during lexical ambiguity resolution. The purpose of the present study was twofold: (a) to examine whether the syntactic category constraint can determine the semantic resolution of Chinese SCA words, and (b) to investigate whether syntactic category of alternative meanings of Chinese homographs can influence the SBE during lexical ambiguity resolution. Four types of Chinese biased homographs (NN, VV, VN, and NV) were embedded into syntactically and semantically subordinate-biased sentences (Experiment 1) and into syntactically subordinate-biased but semantically neutral sentences (Experiment 2). Participants’ eye movements were recorded as they read each sentence. In Experiment 1, the results showed: (1) The SBE for the four types of homographs was significant only in the second-pass reading on the post-target words. (2) Numerically, the NV homographs revealed a larger effect size of SBE than VN homographs on both target and post-target words. In Experiment 2, the results showed: (1) The SBE for VN appeared from the first-pass reading on the target words and lasted to the second-pass reading on the target and post-target words. (2) The SBE for the other types of homographs did not occur until the second-pass reading in all analyzed regions. (3) The SBE for NV occurred much later and less obviously than that for VN. In general, our findings support the constraint-satisfaction models and reject the prediction of the syntax-first models, suggesting that the syntactic category constraint is not the only factor influencing the semantic resolution of SCA words. Tsai, Jie Li 蔡介立 學位論文 ; thesis 152 en_US |
collection |
NDLTD |
language |
en_US |
format |
Others
|
sources |
NDLTD |
description |
碩士 === 國立政治大學 === 語言學研究所 === 102 === Two primary sentence processing models have been proposed to account for the interaction between syntactic and semantic information in reading sentences: Syntax-first models assume that syntactic-category assignment must precede semantic analysis, while constraint-satisfaction models propose that information from different sources is processed and weighed at the same time during sentence comprehension. The present study examined whether these sentence processing models, which assume different contribution of syntactic category and semantic context, can explain the resolution of lexical ambiguity in sentences.
Several eye movement studies have demonstrated the subordinate bias effect (SBE) for lexical-semantic ambiguous words (i.e., NN/VV homographs), indicating that a subordinate-biased semantic context can boost the activation of the subordinate meaning of ambiguous words and causes meaning competition (Duffy, Morris, &; Rayner, 1988). However, the role of syntactic context in lexical ambiguity resolution is less clear. Syntactic category ambiguous words (i.e., SCA words; VN/NV homographs), whose alternative meanings differ in syntactic category (e.g., watch in English), serve as a means of examining the interaction between syntactic category and semantic constraints during lexical ambiguity resolution.
The purpose of the present study was twofold: (a) to examine whether the syntactic category constraint can determine the semantic resolution of Chinese SCA words, and (b) to investigate whether syntactic category of alternative meanings of Chinese homographs can influence the SBE during lexical ambiguity resolution. Four types of Chinese biased homographs (NN, VV, VN, and NV) were embedded into syntactically and semantically subordinate-biased sentences (Experiment 1) and into syntactically subordinate-biased but semantically neutral sentences (Experiment 2). Participants’ eye movements were recorded as they read each sentence.
In Experiment 1, the results showed: (1) The SBE for the four types of homographs was significant only in the second-pass reading on the post-target words. (2) Numerically, the NV homographs revealed a larger effect size of SBE than VN homographs on both target and post-target words. In Experiment 2, the results showed: (1) The SBE for VN appeared from the first-pass reading on the target words and lasted to the second-pass reading on the target and post-target words. (2) The SBE for the other types of homographs did not occur until the second-pass reading in all analyzed regions. (3) The SBE for NV occurred much later and less obviously than that for VN. In general, our findings support the constraint-satisfaction models and reject the prediction of the syntax-first models, suggesting that the syntactic category constraint is not the only factor influencing the semantic resolution of SCA words.
|
author2 |
Tsai, Jie Li |
author_facet |
Tsai, Jie Li Chen, Po Heng 陳柏亨 |
author |
Chen, Po Heng 陳柏亨 |
spellingShingle |
Chen, Po Heng 陳柏亨 The influence of syntactic category and semantic constraints on lexical ambiguity resolution: An eye-movement study of processing Chinese homographs |
author_sort |
Chen, Po Heng |
title |
The influence of syntactic category and semantic constraints on lexical ambiguity resolution: An eye-movement study of processing Chinese homographs |
title_short |
The influence of syntactic category and semantic constraints on lexical ambiguity resolution: An eye-movement study of processing Chinese homographs |
title_full |
The influence of syntactic category and semantic constraints on lexical ambiguity resolution: An eye-movement study of processing Chinese homographs |
title_fullStr |
The influence of syntactic category and semantic constraints on lexical ambiguity resolution: An eye-movement study of processing Chinese homographs |
title_full_unstemmed |
The influence of syntactic category and semantic constraints on lexical ambiguity resolution: An eye-movement study of processing Chinese homographs |
title_sort |
influence of syntactic category and semantic constraints on lexical ambiguity resolution: an eye-movement study of processing chinese homographs |
url |
http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/4keca5 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT chenpoheng theinfluenceofsyntacticcategoryandsemanticconstraintsonlexicalambiguityresolutionaneyemovementstudyofprocessingchinesehomographs AT chénbǎihēng theinfluenceofsyntacticcategoryandsemanticconstraintsonlexicalambiguityresolutionaneyemovementstudyofprocessingchinesehomographs AT chenpoheng cíxìngjíyǔyìxiànzhìduìcíhuìqíyìjiěkùndeyǐngxiǎngzhōngwénqíyìcíchùlǐdeyǎndòngyánjiū AT chénbǎihēng cíxìngjíyǔyìxiànzhìduìcíhuìqíyìjiěkùndeyǐngxiǎngzhōngwénqíyìcíchùlǐdeyǎndòngyánjiū AT chenpoheng influenceofsyntacticcategoryandsemanticconstraintsonlexicalambiguityresolutionaneyemovementstudyofprocessingchinesehomographs AT chénbǎihēng influenceofsyntacticcategoryandsemanticconstraintsonlexicalambiguityresolutionaneyemovementstudyofprocessingchinesehomographs |
_version_ |
1719114989137035264 |