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The Role of Prominence in Activating Focused Words and Their Alternatives in Mandarin: Evidence from Lexical Priming and Recognition Memory

journal contribution
posted on 2022-10-20, 19:44 authored by Mengzhu Yan, Sasha CalhounSasha Calhoun, Paul WarrenPaul Warren
When a sentence is produced with contrastive prosodic prominence, the word that carries the prominence becomes more salient, and alternatives to that word are usually implied. In processing, this implies that focused words and their alternatives should be more strongly activated. Previous research on focus processing has primarily been confined to Germanic languages. The current paper reports on two experiments investigating the role of prosodic prominence in immediate (Experiment 1) and long-term processing (Experiment 2) of focused words and focus alternatives in Mandarin. Prosodic prominence was effective in activating focused words and their alternatives. In the memory task, this facilitation effect was only found toward the beginning of the experiment. We attribute this difference to task-related adaptive use of prosodic prominence in utterance processing. This research sheds light on whether, when, and how listeners use prosodic prominence to identify important information and to evoke alternatives during sentence comprehension.

Funding

Searching for a shared world: the integration of prosody and word ordering in cross-linguistic speech perception

Royal Society of New Zealand

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History

Preferred citation

Yan, M., Calhoun, S. & Warren, P. (2022). The Role of Prominence in Activating Focused Words and Their Alternatives in Mandarin: Evidence from Lexical Priming and Recognition Memory. Language and Speech, 002383092211261-002383092211261. https://doi.org/10.1177/00238309221126108

Journal title

Language and Speech

Publication date

2022-10-14

Pagination

002383092211261-002383092211261

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Publication status

Published online

Online publication date

2022-10-14

ISSN

0023-8309

eISSN

1756-6053

Language

en