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Introducing a new entity into discourse: comprehension and production evidence for the status of dutch er ‘‘there” as a higher-level expectancy monitor

Introducing a new entity into discourse: comprehension and production evidence for the status of dutch er ‘‘there” as a higher-level expectancy monitor
Introducing a new entity into discourse: comprehension and production evidence for the status of dutch er ‘‘there” as a higher-level expectancy monitor
This paper reports on the ways in which new entities are introduced into discourse. First, we present the evidence in support of a model of indefinite reference processing based on three principles: the listener’s ability to make predictive inferences in order to decrease the unexpectedness of upcoming words, the availability to the speaker of grammatical constructions that customize predictive inferences, and the use of ‘‘expectancy monitors” to signal and facilitate the introduction of highly unpredictable entities.

We provide evidence that one of these expectancy monitors in Dutch is the post-verbal variant of existential er (the equivalent of the unstressed existential ‘‘there” in English). In an eye-tracking experiment we demonstrate that the presence of er decreases the processing difficulties caused by low subject expectancy. A corpus-based regression analysis subsequently confirms that the production of er is determined almost exclusively by seven parameters of low subject expectancy.

Together, the comprehension and production data suggest that while existential er functions as an expectancy monitor in much the same way as speech disfluencies (hesitations, pauses and filled pauses), er is a higher-level expectancy monitor because it is available in spoken and written discourse and because it is produced more systematically than any disfluency.
predictive inferencing, expectancy monitoring, speech disfluencies, existential sentences, indefinite reference, locative inversion
153-160
Grondelaers, Stefan
341ce037-06e7-4fd5-bbf7-57e3c7a60687
Speelman, Dirk
ececd4ac-cb68-423a-9b2a-5da431b624e5
Drieghe, Denis
dfe41922-1cea-47f4-904b-26d5c9fe85ce
Brysbaert, Marc
dfe6bf7d-27f6-4546-82ca-375769276ad5
Geeraerts, Dirk
115d7983-e9f1-4547-a3ad-3714042b1783
Grondelaers, Stefan
341ce037-06e7-4fd5-bbf7-57e3c7a60687
Speelman, Dirk
ececd4ac-cb68-423a-9b2a-5da431b624e5
Drieghe, Denis
dfe41922-1cea-47f4-904b-26d5c9fe85ce
Brysbaert, Marc
dfe6bf7d-27f6-4546-82ca-375769276ad5
Geeraerts, Dirk
115d7983-e9f1-4547-a3ad-3714042b1783

Grondelaers, Stefan, Speelman, Dirk, Drieghe, Denis, Brysbaert, Marc and Geeraerts, Dirk (2009) Introducing a new entity into discourse: comprehension and production evidence for the status of dutch er ‘‘there” as a higher-level expectancy monitor. Acta Psychologica, 130 (2), 153-160. (doi:10.1016/j.actpsy.2008.11.003).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This paper reports on the ways in which new entities are introduced into discourse. First, we present the evidence in support of a model of indefinite reference processing based on three principles: the listener’s ability to make predictive inferences in order to decrease the unexpectedness of upcoming words, the availability to the speaker of grammatical constructions that customize predictive inferences, and the use of ‘‘expectancy monitors” to signal and facilitate the introduction of highly unpredictable entities.

We provide evidence that one of these expectancy monitors in Dutch is the post-verbal variant of existential er (the equivalent of the unstressed existential ‘‘there” in English). In an eye-tracking experiment we demonstrate that the presence of er decreases the processing difficulties caused by low subject expectancy. A corpus-based regression analysis subsequently confirms that the production of er is determined almost exclusively by seven parameters of low subject expectancy.

Together, the comprehension and production data suggest that while existential er functions as an expectancy monitor in much the same way as speech disfluencies (hesitations, pauses and filled pauses), er is a higher-level expectancy monitor because it is available in spoken and written discourse and because it is produced more systematically than any disfluency.

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Published date: February 2009
Keywords: predictive inferencing, expectancy monitoring, speech disfluencies, existential sentences, indefinite reference, locative inversion

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 144733
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/144733
PURE UUID: 5ef90cb7-c61d-422e-b793-8f2f4a486629
ORCID for Denis Drieghe: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9630-8410

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Date deposited: 15 Apr 2010 08:43
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:55

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Contributors

Author: Stefan Grondelaers
Author: Dirk Speelman
Author: Denis Drieghe ORCID iD
Author: Marc Brysbaert
Author: Dirk Geeraerts

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