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Developmental Psycholinguistics: On-line methods in Children's language processing (Language Acquisition and Language Disorders) PDF

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Developmental Psycholinguistics Language Acquisition and Language Disorders (LALD) Volumes in this series provide a forum for research contributing to theories of language acquisition (first and second, child and adult), language learnability, language attrition and language disorders. Editor Harald Clahsen Lydia White University of Essex McGill University Editorial Board Melissa F. Bowerman Luigi Rizzi Max Planck Institut für Psycholinguistik, University of Siena Nijmegen Bonnie D. Schwartz Katherine Demuth University of Hawaii at Manoa Brown University Antonella Sorace Wolfgang U. Dressler University of Edinburgh Universität Wien Karin Stromswold Nina Hyams Rutgers University University of California at Los Angeles Jürgen Weissenborn Jürgen M. Meisel Universität Potsdam Universität Hamburg Frank Wijnen William O’Grady Utrecht University University of Hawaii Mabel Rice University of Kansas Volume 44 Developmental Psycholinguistics. On-line methods in children’s language processing Edited by Irina A. Sekerina, Eva M. Fernández and Harald Clahsen Developmental Psycholinguistics On-line methods in children’s language processing Edited by Irina A. Sekerina City University New York Eva M. Fernández City University New York Harald Clahsen University of Essex John Benjamins Publishing Company Amsterdam / Philadelphia TM The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of 8 American National Standard for Information Sciences – Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ansi z39.48-1984. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Developmental psycholinguistics : on-line methods in children's language processing / edited by Irina A. Sekerina, Eva M. Fernández, Harald Clahsen. p. cm. (Language Acquisition and Language Disorders, issn 0925-0123 ; v. 44) Includes bibliographical references and index. 1. Language acquisition--Data processing. 2. Language acquisition--Research- -Methodology. I. Sekerina, I. A. (Irina A.), 1961- II. Fernández, Eva M. III. Clahsen, Harald. P118.3.D487 2008 401'.930285--dc22 2007038990 isbn 978 90 272 5304 0 (Hb; alk. paper) isbn 978 90 272 5305 7 (Pb; alk. paper) © 2008 – John Benjamins B.V. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, by print, photoprint, microfilm, or any other means, without written permission from the publisher. John Benjamins Publishing Co. · P.O. Box 36224 · 1020 me Amsterdam · The Netherlands John Benjamins North America · P.O. Box 27519 · Philadelphia pa 19118-0519 · usa Table of contents Introduction vii Irina A. Sekerina, Eva M. Fernández and Harald Clahsen Listofcontributors xvii Behavioralmethodsforinvestigatingmorphological andsyntacticprocessinginchildren 1 Harald Clahsen Event-relatedbrainpotentialsasawindowtochildren’s languageprocessing:Fromsyllablestosentences 29 Claudia Männel and Angela D. Friederici Usingeyemovementsasadevelopmentalmeasure withinpsycholinguistics 73 John C. Trueswell Lookingwhilelistening:Usingeyemovementstomonitor spokenlanguagecomprehensionbyinfantsandyoungchildren 97 Anne Fernald, Renate Zangl, Ana Luz Portillo and Virginia A. Marchman Whatlurksbeneath:Syntacticprimingduringlanguage comprehensioninpreschoolers(andadults) 137 Jesse Snedeker and Malathi Thothathiri Languageacquisitionresearch.Apeekatthepast: Aglimpseintothefuture 169 Helen Smith Cairns Index 187 Introduction IrinaA.Sekerina,EvaM.FernándezandHaraldClahsen Thestudyofchildlanguageoccupiesauniqueplaceinresearchonchildren’scog- nitivedevelopment.Thiscomesasnosurprise,aslanguageisquiteclosetothe coreofwhatitmeanstobehuman.Childrensuccessfullylearntheirnativelan- guageinarelativelyshorttimeandwithouttheneedforformalinstruction.Lan- guageisalsothemainvehiclebywhichwelearnaboutotherpeople’sthoughts; therefore,cognitiveandlinguisticaspectsofhumandevelopmentmustbeinti- matelyrelated. Traditionalmethodsofinquiryinmodernlinguisticsandcognitivepsychol- ogyhaveenabledustolearnagreatdealabouthowchildrenacquirelanguageand thestagestheygothroughontheirwaytoadultcompetence(Pinker1995).But empiricalstudiesonhowchildren’slanguagedevelopspublishedoverthelast30 or40yearshaveastrikingcharacteristicincommon:theytreatlanguageacquisi- tionasaprocessthatinvolvesbuildingastaticdatabasecalledthe grammar,tothe exclusionofthemechanismsthatoperateinrealtimewhenthechildproducesor comprehendslanguage.TheclassicCompetence/Performancedistinction(e.g., Chomsky1964)providesausefulframeworkfordiscussingthisproblem:while investigationsofchildlanguageacquisitionaregroundedontheassumptionthat knowledgeoflanguageisputtoworkviaasetofprocessingmechanisms(perfor- mance),theprimaryconcerninacquisitionresearchhasbeenwithhowthatprin- cipledknowledge(competence)develops.McDaniel,McKeeandCairns(1996), intheirseminalbookonassessingchildlanguage,describedhowtheknowledge thatconstitutescompetencehadupuntilthenbeenextensivelystudied,andthey documentedthepredominanceofoff-lineexperimentalmethods,thatis,tech- niquesthatpromptedchildrentoactoutsentences,answerquestionsorprovide grammaticalityjudgments,responsesthatcouldthenbecomparedtothosepro- videdbyadultsorbyolderoryoungerchildren.Armedwithempiricalevidence ofthatsort,thefieldwasabletobegintoaddresssomeofthemostbasicquestions aboutlanguagedevelopmentandtoformulateexplicitdescriptionsaboutthena- tureofdevelopmentalsequences. viii IrinaA.Sekerina,EvaM.FernándezandHaraldClahsen Theeraoftraditionalresearchonlanguageacquisition,capturedsowellin thevolumebyMcDanieletal.(1996),hasgrownintoamatureareaofinquiry whoseinsightshaveledtoarichunderstandingaboutthedevelopmentoflin- guisticcompetence.Buttimeshavechanged,asweenteranewerathattakesa “dynamicprocessingapproach”tothestudyoflanguagedevelopment(Trueswell thisvolume).Wearewitnessingagrowinginterestinthemechanismsthatun- derlieproductionandcomprehensionabilitiesinchildren,ashiftfromafocus oncompetencetoafocusonperformance.Thisenterprisehasbeensignificantly facilitatedbyrecentadvancesintechnologiesthatpermittrackingbehaviorata veryfinetemporalresolution,methodsthathavebeensuccessfullyandexten- sivelyappliedtostudylanguageprocessinginadults.Suchnewtechniques,which wewillcollectivelyrefertoason-line,measurereactiontimes,trackeyegazes, examinebrainactivity.Someofthesemethods,likeself-pacedreading,self-paced listening,andcross-modalprimingbenefitfromhavingalong-standingtradition inthestudyofadultlanguageprocessing.Others,likeeyetrackingandneuro- physiologicaltechniques(Henderson&Ferreira2004;Trueswell&Tanenhaus 2005;Carreiras&Clifton2004),arenewerbutquitepowerfuladditionstotheex- perimentaltoolkit,particularlybecausetheyprovidethemeanstostudyingreat detailveryearlyphasesofprocessing,andbecausetheyrelylittleonconscious attentiontoormetalinguisticawarenessoflinguisticstimuli. On-linemethodshavemadetheirwayintolanguageacquisitionresearch withatrulyamazingspeed.Amere10yearsago,asdocumentedbyCecileMcKee (1996)inherchapteronon-linemethodsinchildlanguageresearch,reaction timemethods(cross-modalpriminginparticular)dominatedthescene,neu- roimaginghardlyhavingapresence.EyetrackingwasfullyabsentfromMcKee’s chapter. Whenappliedtothestudyofchildlanguage,on-linemethodspermitre- searcherstoobservetheinteractionofgrammarprinciples(competence)and behaviorallimitationsand/orpreferences(performance),withagreaterlevelof detailandagreaternumberofperspectivesthaneverbefore.Wecannowinves- tigatehowchildrencoordinatemultiplesourcesofinformationinrealtimeand arriveatsentencemeaningusinginformationextractednotonlyfromthewords andstructureofthesentencebutalsofromthenonlinguisticcontext.Theap- plicationofon-linemethodsalsomakesitpossibletotestchildren’sperformance limits,toseparateperformancefromcompetenceinassessingchildren’sstaticand developinglinguisticknowledge,anapproachthatpermitsbuildingandtesting theoriesabouthowchildren’slanguageprocessingcontributestotheiracquisition oflanguage(Fodor1998). Thegrowingimportanceofon-linemethodsinchildlanguageresearchwas evidentattheforumthatbroughtthisvolumeintobeing,theWorkshop on On-  Introduction ix Line Methods in Children’s Language ProcessingheldattheGraduateCenterofthe CityUniversityofNewYorkinMarch2006.Workshopparticipantsdiscussed andevaluatedquestionsaboutthedesign,methodology,ethics,andpracticalities ofconductingsuchstudieswithchildren,andspeculatedonfuturedirectionsfor theemergingfieldofdevelopmental psycholinguistics(Trueswellthisvolume)and itssubfield,developmental cognitive neuroscience(Männel&Friedericithisvol- ume).Inassemblingthisvolume,weaskeddistinguishedresearchers–pioneers intheapplicationtochildlanguageresearchofarangeofon-linemethods–to provideoverviewsonhowchangingresearchparadigmsareadvancingourun- derstandingoflanguageprocessinginchildren.Whiletheoverarchingtheme ofthisvolumeismethodologicalinnature,thecollectionofchaptersachievesa broadcoveragealsooflinguisticanddevelopmentalareasbyincludingresearch onbothcomprehensionandproduction;byaddressingsound-,word-andsen- tence-levelrepresentations;andbydiscussingaspectsofacquisitionthroughout theentirespanofearlychildhood,frominfancytotheelementaryschoolyears. Thechaptersinthevolumearededicatedtoreactiontimemethods(Clahsen); eyetrackinginitstwomainforms,free-viewing(Trueswell;Snedeker&Thotha- thiri)andlooking-while-listening(Fernald,Zangl,Portillo&Marchman);and event-relatedpotentials(ERPs;Männel&Friederici).Functionalneuroimaging (fMRI),magnetoencephalography(MEG)andopticalimaginghaveyettomake theirwayintodevelopmentalpsycholinguisticsand,therefore,arenotrepresent- edinthevolume. Wehavechosentogroupandorderthechaptersintermsofthemethodsthey focuson,startingwithmethodsexaminingbehavioralresponsesandfollowed bymethodsanalyzingevent-relatedpotentialsandmethodstrackingeyegazes. Closingthevolume,Chapter6providesahistoricalbackdropandspeculates aboutthefutureofthefield. Chapter1,“Behavioralmethodsforinvestigatingmorphologicalandsyntac- ticprocessinginchildren”(HaraldClahsen),describesandevaluatesexperiments usingresponse-timemeasurestoexamineprocessesinvolvedinchildren’spro- cessingofsentencesandinflectedwords.ThechapterbuildsonCecileMcKee’s documentation(1998)ofon-linemethodsinchildlanguageresearchandpres- entsanupdatedoverviewfocusingontechniquesthatClahsen,Felser,andthe researchgroupattheUniversityofEssexhaveusedtoexaminehowchildren processcomplexsyntacticphenomenaandmorphologicallycomplexwordsin realtime.Thechapterintroducesfivecriteriaagainstwhichthevariousmeth- odsforstudyingchildren’son-linelanguageprocessingcanbeassessed.These criteriaare:(a)timesensitivityofthetechnique,(b)naturalnessofstimulipre- sentation,(c)childappropriatenessofthetechnique,(d)linguisticversatility,and (e)filedcompatibility.Itthenprovidesanoverviewofbehavioraltasksforin-

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