Grammatical gender in language production: psycholinguistic evidence from Greek
dc.contributor.author
Plemmenou, Evangelica A.
en
dc.date.accessioned
2013-06-26T12:34:43Z
dc.date.available
2013-06-26T12:34:43Z
dc.date.issued
2003
dc.description.abstract
This thesis is concerned with the representation and processing of grammatical gender in
Greek. It addresses two issues. The first concerns the conditions under which gender priming
can be obtained; the second concerns the relationship between gender and other nominal
categories, particularly case and number. These two issues bear upon the more general
question of how lexical-syntactic properties are stored, retrieved and used during
grammatical encoding, and how various consequences of the grammatical make-up of words
are evident in the fluency of speech. Furthermore, insofar as grammatical gender constitutes
a point of divergence a cross different languages the thesis uses Greek data to examine the
scope of a particular production theory originally developed for typologically distinct
languages.
The theoretical framework for this thesis is the production model of Levelt, Roelofs and
Meyer (1999). A particularly attractive feature of this model is that it makes highly
articulated proposals about the content and the mechanisms of access to lemma level
representations that is, of abstract representations of words and morphemes. The critical
claims for this thesis concern the distinction between inherent grammatical properties and
diacritic parameters, and the conditions under which these properties are selected or merely
activated.
The empirical part of the thesis comprises two sets of experiments employing primed picture
naming. The first set (Experiments 14), which focuses on gender alone, investigates the
linguistic contexts in which gender priming can be obtained. These include bare noun or
definite determiner + noun primes and colour adjective or indefinite determiner + noun
targets. The picture of gender that arises from these experiments is largely compatible with
the Levelt et al. treatment of gender insofar as it shows that gender refers primarily to an
abstract lexical-syntactic property. Also in line with what has been previously observed for
other languages, gender selection, which occurs when agreement has to be computed
between a gender controller and an agreement target, proves to be a pre-requisited or gender
priming.
The second set (Experiments 5-8) focuses on the relationship between gender and case on
the one hand, and gender and number on the other. Two possible accounts of this
relationship (independent features and feature clusters) provide plausible yet extreme
hypotheses about the way gender, case and number may be interrelated. Experiments 5-8
show that when other nominal properties are varied, gender priming can be obtained only
with a particular type of prime noun phrase (i. e., definite determiner + noun). Furthermore,
the effect of gender relatednessis more readily apparentw hen a single selection process,
namely gender selection, has to be carried out on-line during the retrieval of the target
lemma. In all, the present results from Greek converge with related evidence in the language
production literature insofar as they show that prior access to gender information affects
subsequent word retrieval. More important, the conditions under which this effect is
observed confirm two basic assumptions of the Levelt et al. model concerning first, the
abstract nature of lexical-syntactic properties and second, the processing distinction between
activation and selection, and thus strengthen the viability of this account. Finally, the
apparent sensitivity of the production system to the coordination of different selection
processes e.g., genders election, cases election and number selection, suggests that although
gender is independently represented its effect on word production is determined, at least in
part, by the relative effect of the other selection processes.
en
dc.identifier.other
492981
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/6749
dc.language.iso
eng
dc.publisher
University of Edinburgh
en
dc.subject
Language
en
dc.subject
Linguistics
en
dc.title
Grammatical gender in language production: psycholinguistic evidence from Greek
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
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