Forgrunding af ledsætninger: - et psykolingvistisk forsøg

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Forgrunding af ledsætninger : - et psykolingvistisk forsøg. / Christensen, Marie Herget; Christensen, Tanya Karoli; Jensen, Torben Juel.

I: Ny forskning i grammatik, Bind 23, 2016, s. 5-21.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Christensen, MH, Christensen, TK & Jensen, TJ 2016, 'Forgrunding af ledsætninger: - et psykolingvistisk forsøg', Ny forskning i grammatik, bind 23, s. 5-21. <http://ojs.statsbiblioteket.dk/index.php/nfg/article/view/24641/21589>

APA

Christensen, M. H., Christensen, T. K., & Jensen, T. J. (2016). Forgrunding af ledsætninger: - et psykolingvistisk forsøg. Ny forskning i grammatik, 23, 5-21. http://ojs.statsbiblioteket.dk/index.php/nfg/article/view/24641/21589

Vancouver

Christensen MH, Christensen TK, Jensen TJ. Forgrunding af ledsætninger: - et psykolingvistisk forsøg. Ny forskning i grammatik. 2016;23:5-21.

Author

Christensen, Marie Herget ; Christensen, Tanya Karoli ; Jensen, Torben Juel. / Forgrunding af ledsætninger : - et psykolingvistisk forsøg. I: Ny forskning i grammatik. 2016 ; Bind 23. s. 5-21.

Bibtex

@article{4cf78ed8c74549b5ab74a9373a131c07,
title = "Forgrunding af leds{\ae}tninger: - et psykolingvistisk fors{\o}g",
abstract = "It is a common phenomenon in spoken language that the main point of an utterance is found in a syntactically subordinated clause instead of in its matrix clause. This is the case in constructions where the matrix clause is semantically secondary as well as in subclauses with V>Adv word order in Danish. We argue that such subclauses are foregrounded, and that a foregrounded subclause will attract more attention than a non-foregrounded. To test this, we have conducted an experiment under the Text Change paradigm. Results show that readers pay significantly more attention to the subclause in constructions with semantically secondary matrix clauses than in constructions with semifactive matrix clauses, and, in the latter constructions, more attention to subclauses with V>Adv word order than with Adv>V word order.",
keywords = "Det Humanistiske Fakultet, S{\ae}tningsprocessering, leds{\ae}tninger, forgrundsbetydning, ledstilling, {\AE}ndringsblindhed",
author = "Christensen, {Marie Herget} and Christensen, {Tanya Karoli} and Jensen, {Torben Juel}",
year = "2016",
language = "Dansk",
volume = "23",
pages = "5--21",
journal = "Ny forskning i grammatik",
issn = "1902-1291",
publisher = "Syddansk Universitetsforlag",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Forgrunding af ledsætninger

T2 - - et psykolingvistisk forsøg

AU - Christensen, Marie Herget

AU - Christensen, Tanya Karoli

AU - Jensen, Torben Juel

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - It is a common phenomenon in spoken language that the main point of an utterance is found in a syntactically subordinated clause instead of in its matrix clause. This is the case in constructions where the matrix clause is semantically secondary as well as in subclauses with V>Adv word order in Danish. We argue that such subclauses are foregrounded, and that a foregrounded subclause will attract more attention than a non-foregrounded. To test this, we have conducted an experiment under the Text Change paradigm. Results show that readers pay significantly more attention to the subclause in constructions with semantically secondary matrix clauses than in constructions with semifactive matrix clauses, and, in the latter constructions, more attention to subclauses with V>Adv word order than with Adv>V word order.

AB - It is a common phenomenon in spoken language that the main point of an utterance is found in a syntactically subordinated clause instead of in its matrix clause. This is the case in constructions where the matrix clause is semantically secondary as well as in subclauses with V>Adv word order in Danish. We argue that such subclauses are foregrounded, and that a foregrounded subclause will attract more attention than a non-foregrounded. To test this, we have conducted an experiment under the Text Change paradigm. Results show that readers pay significantly more attention to the subclause in constructions with semantically secondary matrix clauses than in constructions with semifactive matrix clauses, and, in the latter constructions, more attention to subclauses with V>Adv word order than with Adv>V word order.

KW - Det Humanistiske Fakultet

KW - Sætningsprocessering

KW - ledsætninger

KW - forgrundsbetydning

KW - ledstilling

KW - Ændringsblindhed

M3 - Tidsskriftartikel

VL - 23

SP - 5

EP - 21

JO - Ny forskning i grammatik

JF - Ny forskning i grammatik

SN - 1902-1291

ER -

ID: 155995862