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Interactions between givenness and clause order in children's processing of complex sentences

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Interactions between givenness and clause order in children's processing of complex sentences. / de Ruiter, L.E.; Lieven, E.V.M.; Brandt, S. et al.
In: Cognition, Vol. 198, 104130, 31.05.2020.

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de Ruiter LE, Lieven EVM, Brandt S, Theakston AL. Interactions between givenness and clause order in children's processing of complex sentences. Cognition. 2020 May 31;198:104130. Epub 2020 Feb 4. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2019.104130

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de Ruiter, L.E. ; Lieven, E.V.M. ; Brandt, S. et al. / Interactions between givenness and clause order in children's processing of complex sentences. In: Cognition. 2020 ; Vol. 198.

Bibtex

@article{a0e207731bc347d1822c235e5da5f29c,
title = "Interactions between givenness and clause order in children's processing of complex sentences",
abstract = "Understanding complex sentences that contain multiple clauses referring to events in the world and the relations between them is an important development in children's language learning. A number of theoretical positions have suggested that factors like syntactic structure (clause order), iconicity (whether the order of clauses reflects the order of events), and givenness (whether information is shared between speakers) affect ease of comprehension. We tested these accounts by investigating how these factors interact in British English-speaking children's comprehension of complex sentences with adverbial clauses (after, before, because, if), while controlling for language level, working memory and inhibitory control. 92 children in three age groups (4, 5 and 8 years) and 17 adults completed a picture selection task. Participants heard an initial context sentence, followed by a two-clause sentence which varied in: (1) the order of the main and subordinate clause; (2) the order of given and new information; and (3) whether the given information occurred in the main or subordinate clause. Accuracy and response times were measured. Our results showed that given-before-new improves comprehension for four- and five-year-olds, but only when the given information is in the initial subordinate clause (e.g., “Sue crawls on the floor. Before she crawls on the floor, she hops up and down”). Temporal adverbials (after, before) were processed faster than causal adverbials (because, if). These effects were not found for the eight-year-olds, whose performance was more similar to that of the adults. Providing a context sentence also improved performance compared to presenting the test sentences in isolation. We conclude that existing accounts based on either ease of processing or information structure cannot fully account for these findings, and suggest a more integrated explanation which reflects children's developing language and literacy skills.",
keywords = "Language development, Comprehension, Complex sentences, Context, Information structure",
author = "{de Ruiter}, L.E. and E.V.M. Lieven and S. Brandt and A.L. Theakston",
year = "2020",
month = may,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1016/j.cognition.2019.104130",
language = "English",
volume = "198",
journal = "Cognition",
issn = "0010-0277",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Interactions between givenness and clause order in children's processing of complex sentences

AU - de Ruiter, L.E.

AU - Lieven, E.V.M.

AU - Brandt, S.

AU - Theakston, A.L.

PY - 2020/5/31

Y1 - 2020/5/31

N2 - Understanding complex sentences that contain multiple clauses referring to events in the world and the relations between them is an important development in children's language learning. A number of theoretical positions have suggested that factors like syntactic structure (clause order), iconicity (whether the order of clauses reflects the order of events), and givenness (whether information is shared between speakers) affect ease of comprehension. We tested these accounts by investigating how these factors interact in British English-speaking children's comprehension of complex sentences with adverbial clauses (after, before, because, if), while controlling for language level, working memory and inhibitory control. 92 children in three age groups (4, 5 and 8 years) and 17 adults completed a picture selection task. Participants heard an initial context sentence, followed by a two-clause sentence which varied in: (1) the order of the main and subordinate clause; (2) the order of given and new information; and (3) whether the given information occurred in the main or subordinate clause. Accuracy and response times were measured. Our results showed that given-before-new improves comprehension for four- and five-year-olds, but only when the given information is in the initial subordinate clause (e.g., “Sue crawls on the floor. Before she crawls on the floor, she hops up and down”). Temporal adverbials (after, before) were processed faster than causal adverbials (because, if). These effects were not found for the eight-year-olds, whose performance was more similar to that of the adults. Providing a context sentence also improved performance compared to presenting the test sentences in isolation. We conclude that existing accounts based on either ease of processing or information structure cannot fully account for these findings, and suggest a more integrated explanation which reflects children's developing language and literacy skills.

AB - Understanding complex sentences that contain multiple clauses referring to events in the world and the relations between them is an important development in children's language learning. A number of theoretical positions have suggested that factors like syntactic structure (clause order), iconicity (whether the order of clauses reflects the order of events), and givenness (whether information is shared between speakers) affect ease of comprehension. We tested these accounts by investigating how these factors interact in British English-speaking children's comprehension of complex sentences with adverbial clauses (after, before, because, if), while controlling for language level, working memory and inhibitory control. 92 children in three age groups (4, 5 and 8 years) and 17 adults completed a picture selection task. Participants heard an initial context sentence, followed by a two-clause sentence which varied in: (1) the order of the main and subordinate clause; (2) the order of given and new information; and (3) whether the given information occurred in the main or subordinate clause. Accuracy and response times were measured. Our results showed that given-before-new improves comprehension for four- and five-year-olds, but only when the given information is in the initial subordinate clause (e.g., “Sue crawls on the floor. Before she crawls on the floor, she hops up and down”). Temporal adverbials (after, before) were processed faster than causal adverbials (because, if). These effects were not found for the eight-year-olds, whose performance was more similar to that of the adults. Providing a context sentence also improved performance compared to presenting the test sentences in isolation. We conclude that existing accounts based on either ease of processing or information structure cannot fully account for these findings, and suggest a more integrated explanation which reflects children's developing language and literacy skills.

KW - Language development

KW - Comprehension

KW - Complex sentences

KW - Context

KW - Information structure

U2 - 10.1016/j.cognition.2019.104130

DO - 10.1016/j.cognition.2019.104130

M3 - Journal article

VL - 198

JO - Cognition

JF - Cognition

SN - 0010-0277

M1 - 104130

ER -