Similarity-Based Interference and the Acquisition of Adjunct Control

Juliana Gerard, Jeffrey Lidz, Shalom Zuckerman, M. Pinto

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    Abstract

    Previous research on the acquisition of adjunct control has observed non-adultlike behavior for sentences like “John bumped Mary after tripping on the sidewalk.” While adults only allow a subject control interpretation for these sentences (that John tripped on the sidewalk), preschool-aged children have been reported to allow a much wider range of interpretations. A number of different tasks have been used with the aim of identifying a grammatical source of children’s errors. In this paper, we consider the role of extragrammatical factors. In two comprehension experiments, we demonstrate that error rates go up when the similarity increases between an antecedent and a linearly intervening noun phrase, first with similarity in gender, and next with similarity in number marking. This suggests that difficulties with adjunct control are to be explained (at least in part) by the sentence processing mechanisms that underlie similarity-based interference in adults.
    Original languageEnglish
    Article number1822
    JournalFrontiers in Psychology
    Volume8
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 18 Oct 2017

    Keywords

    • adjunct control
    • language acquisition
    • similarity-based interference
    • intervention
    • binding
    • anaphora

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