{"title":"对象A '依赖性习得中的局部性:来自法语的见解","authors":"Stéphanie Durrleman, Anamaria Bentea","doi":"10.16995/glossa.5876","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Children’s difficulties with dependencies involving movement of an object to the left periphery of the clause (object relative clauses/RCs and wh-questions), have been explained in terms of intervention effects arising when the moved object and the intervening subject share a lexical N feature (Friedmann, Belletti & Rizzi 2009). Such an account raises various questions: (1) Do these effects hold in the absence of a lexical N feature when the object and the intervener share other relevant features? (2) Do phi-features with a semantic role modulate such effects? (3) Does the degree of feature overlap determine a gradience in performance? We addressed these in three sentence-picture matching studies with French-speaking children (4;8 to 6;3), by assessing comprehension of (1) subject and object RCs headed by the demonstrative pronouns celui/celle and matching or mismatching in number; (2) object RCs headed by a lexical N and matching or mismatching in animacy; (3) object who- and which-questions. Our results show that mismatches in number, not in animacy, enhance comprehension of object RCs, even in the absence of a lexical N feature, and confirm previous findings that object who-questions yield better comprehension than object which-questions. Comparing across studies, the following gradation emerges with respect to performance accuracy: disjunction > intersection > inclusion. The global interpretation of these findings is that fine-grained phi-features determining movement are both sufficient and necessary for locality, and the degree of overlap of these features can capture the pattern of performance observed in children, namely higher accuracy as featural differences increase.","PeriodicalId":46319,"journal":{"name":"Glossa-A Journal of General Linguistics","volume":"1 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.9000,"publicationDate":"2021-09-20","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"3","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Locality in the acquisition of object A’-dependencies: insights from French\",\"authors\":\"Stéphanie Durrleman, Anamaria Bentea\",\"doi\":\"10.16995/glossa.5876\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Children’s difficulties with dependencies involving movement of an object to the left periphery of the clause (object relative clauses/RCs and wh-questions), have been explained in terms of intervention effects arising when the moved object and the intervening subject share a lexical N feature (Friedmann, Belletti & Rizzi 2009). Such an account raises various questions: (1) Do these effects hold in the absence of a lexical N feature when the object and the intervener share other relevant features? (2) Do phi-features with a semantic role modulate such effects? (3) Does the degree of feature overlap determine a gradience in performance? We addressed these in three sentence-picture matching studies with French-speaking children (4;8 to 6;3), by assessing comprehension of (1) subject and object RCs headed by the demonstrative pronouns celui/celle and matching or mismatching in number; (2) object RCs headed by a lexical N and matching or mismatching in animacy; (3) object who- and which-questions. Our results show that mismatches in number, not in animacy, enhance comprehension of object RCs, even in the absence of a lexical N feature, and confirm previous findings that object who-questions yield better comprehension than object which-questions. 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引用次数: 3
摘要
儿童在依赖关系方面的困难涉及到一个物体移动到子句的左边缘(对象关系子句/ rc和wh-问句),这已经被解释为当移动的物体和干预的主体共享一个词汇N特征时产生的干预效应(Friedmann, Belletti & Rizzi 2009)。这样的解释提出了各种问题:(1)当对象和干预者共享其他相关特征时,在没有词汇N特征的情况下,这些效应是否成立?(2)具有语义作用的phil -features是否调节了这种效应?(3)特征重叠的程度是否决定了性能的梯度?我们通过对法语儿童(4、8至6、3)的三个句子-图片匹配研究来解决这些问题,通过评估(1)以指示代词celui/cell为首的主语和宾语rc的理解以及数量的匹配或不匹配;(2)以词汇N开头的对象匹配和不匹配;(3)反对who- and - which疑问句。我们的研究结果表明,即使在没有词汇N特征的情况下,数量上的不匹配,而不是动画性上的不匹配,也能增强对对象rc的理解,并证实了之前的研究结果,即对象who问题比对象which问题更容易理解。比较各研究,在性能准确性方面出现以下等级:分离>交叉>包含。对这些发现的整体解释是,细粒度的phi特征决定了运动的局域性,这些特征的重叠程度可以捕捉到在儿童中观察到的表现模式,即随着特征差异的增加,准确性更高。
Locality in the acquisition of object A’-dependencies: insights from French
Children’s difficulties with dependencies involving movement of an object to the left periphery of the clause (object relative clauses/RCs and wh-questions), have been explained in terms of intervention effects arising when the moved object and the intervening subject share a lexical N feature (Friedmann, Belletti & Rizzi 2009). Such an account raises various questions: (1) Do these effects hold in the absence of a lexical N feature when the object and the intervener share other relevant features? (2) Do phi-features with a semantic role modulate such effects? (3) Does the degree of feature overlap determine a gradience in performance? We addressed these in three sentence-picture matching studies with French-speaking children (4;8 to 6;3), by assessing comprehension of (1) subject and object RCs headed by the demonstrative pronouns celui/celle and matching or mismatching in number; (2) object RCs headed by a lexical N and matching or mismatching in animacy; (3) object who- and which-questions. Our results show that mismatches in number, not in animacy, enhance comprehension of object RCs, even in the absence of a lexical N feature, and confirm previous findings that object who-questions yield better comprehension than object which-questions. Comparing across studies, the following gradation emerges with respect to performance accuracy: disjunction > intersection > inclusion. The global interpretation of these findings is that fine-grained phi-features determining movement are both sufficient and necessary for locality, and the degree of overlap of these features can capture the pattern of performance observed in children, namely higher accuracy as featural differences increase.