The Interaction of Linguistic and Visual Cues for the Processing of Case in Russian by Russian-German Bilinguals: An Eye Tracking Study
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35237Date
2024-02-21Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Modulation of visual attention in the Visual World Paradigm relies on parallel processing of linguistic and visual information. Previous studies have argued that the human linguistic capacity includes
an aspect of anticipation of upcoming material. Such anticipation can be triggered by both lexical and
grammatical/morphosyntactic cues. In this study, we investigated the relationship between comprehension and prediction by testing how subtle changes in visual representations can affect the processing
of grammatical case cues in Russian by Russian-German bilingual children (n = 49, age 8−13). The
linguistic manipulation followed previous designs, contrasting SVO and OVS sentences, where the first
NP (NP1) was marked with nominative or accusative case, respectively. Three types of visual displays
were compared: (i) individual referents (potential agent/theme); (ii) pairs of referents (NP1 + potential
agent/theme); and (iii) events (representing interactions between the referents). Participants were significantly more sensitive to the case manipulation when presented with events compared to the other
two types of visual display. This suggests that they were able to quickly integrate the thematic role
information signaled by grammatical case in the event representations. However, they were less likely
to use the case information to anticipate upcoming arguments when the target pictures represented individual referents or pairs of noninteracting referents. We hypothesize that the process of argument
anticipation is mediated by the activation of syntactic templates (SVO or OSV, depending on the case
marking on NP1). The relatively weak anticipation effect observed may be attributed to the absence,
or weak representation, of the noncanonical OVS template in the bilingual children’s long-term
memory.
Publisher
WileyCitation
Minor S, Mitrofanova N, Westergaard M. The Interaction of Linguistic and Visual Cues for the Processing of Case in Russian by Russian-German Bilinguals: An Eye Tracking Study. Topics in Cognitive Science. 2024Metadata
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