English
 
Help Privacy Policy Disclaimer
  Advanced SearchBrowse

Item

ITEM ACTIONSEXPORT
  The discourse bases of relativization: An investigation of young German and English-speaking children's comprehension of relative clauses

Brandt, S., Kidd, E., Lieven, E., & Tomasello, M. (2009). The discourse bases of relativization: An investigation of young German and English-speaking children's comprehension of relative clauses. Cognitive Linguistics, 20(3), 539-570. doi:10.1515/COGL.2009.024.

Item is

Files

show Files
hide Files
:
brandt_etal_2009.pdf (Publisher version), 317KB
Name:
brandt_etal_2009.pdf
Description:
-
OA-Status:
Visibility:
Public
MIME-Type / Checksum:
application/pdf / [MD5]
Technical Metadata:
Copyright Date:
-
Copyright Info:
-
License:
-

Locators

show

Creators

show
hide
 Creators:
Brandt, S.1, 2, Author
Kidd, Evan1, 2, Author           
Lieven, E.1, 2, Author
Tomasello, M.1, 2, Author
Affiliations:
1Department of Developmental and Comparative Psychology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Max Planck Society, ou_1497671              
2University of Manchester, ou_persistent22              

Content

show
hide
Free keywords: -
 Abstract: In numerous comprehension studies, across different languages, children have performed worse on object relatives (e.g., the dog that the cat chased) than on subject relatives (e.g., the dog that chased the cat). One possible reason for this is that the test sentences did not exactly match the kinds of object relatives that children typically experience. Adults and children usually hear and produce object relatives with inanimate heads and pronominal subjects (e.g., the car that we bought last year) (cf. Kidd et al., Language and Cognitive Processes 22: 860–897, 2007). We tested young 3-year old German- and English-speaking children with a referential selection task. Children from both language groups performed best in the condition where the experimenter described inanimate referents with object relatives that contained pronominal subjects (e.g., Can you give me the sweater that he bought?). Importantly, when the object relatives met the constraints identified in spoken discourse, children understood them as well as subject relatives, or even better. These results speak against a purely structural explanation for children's difficulty with object relatives as observed in previous studies, but rather support the usage-based account, according to which discourse function and experience with language shape the representation of linguistic structures.

Details

show
hide
Language(s): eng - English
 Dates: 2009
 Publication Status: Issued
 Pages: -
 Publishing info: -
 Table of Contents: -
 Rev. Type: Peer
 Identifiers: DOI: 10.1515/COGL.2009.024
 Degree: -

Event

show

Legal Case

show

Project information

show

Source 1

show
hide
Title: Cognitive Linguistics
Source Genre: Journal
 Creator(s):
Affiliations:
Publ. Info: Berlin : Mouton de Gruyter
Pages: - Volume / Issue: 20 (3) Sequence Number: - Start / End Page: 539 - 570 Identifier: ISSN: 0936-5907
CoNE: https://pure.mpg.de/cone/journals/resource/954925570858