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Abstract:
Predictions allow for an efficient processing in communicative situations. In order to be
efficient, predictions need to be adapted to characteristics of the environment. In a
communicative situation, speaker-specific language use might shape a listener’s
predictions about upcoming language stimuli. In the present experiment we asked whether
listeners use speaker characteristics to generate predictions about syntactic structure and
how these predictions might change over time.
Twenty participants were presented with sentences which were spoken by two different
speakers. Sentences had either a Subject-Object-Verb (SOV) structure or an Object-
Subject-Verb (OSV) structure. Crucially, the two speakers differed with regards to the
frequency by which they produced a particular syntactic structure. One of the speakers
had a high probability to produce a SOV structure and a low probability to produce an OSV
structure, and vice versa for the other speaker. Additionally, speakers produced sentences
which were ambiguous towards their syntactic structure. For the ambiguous sentences,
participants had to identify the subject or the object of the sentence. This allowed us to
infer participants’ predictions regarding the syntactic sentence structure. Furthermore, in
order to assess the significance of speaker-specific predictions, participants were invited
to a follow-up study eight months after the initial exposure to the speakers.
The data show that participants started with a strong bias towards the SOV structure,
which is the canonical sentence structure in German. With increasing exposure to the
speakers, however, participants developed predictions regarding the particular syntactic
structure based on speaker identity. These predictions were still coupled to the speakers
eight months after the initial exposure. This demonstrates that listeners are sensitive to
speaker-specific syntactic preferences and use this information to generate predictions.