@article{SilvaGerthClahsen2013, author = {Silva, Renita and Gerth, Sabrina and Clahsen, Harald}, title = {Morphological constraints in children's spoken language comprehension - a visual world study of plurals inside compounds in English}, series = {Cognition : international journal of cognitive science}, volume = {129}, journal = {Cognition : international journal of cognitive science}, number = {2}, publisher = {Elsevier}, address = {Amsterdam}, issn = {0010-0277}, doi = {10.1016/j.cognition.2013.08.003}, pages = {457 -- 469}, year = {2013}, abstract = {Many previous studies have shown that the human language processor is capable of rapidly integrating information from different sources during reading or listening. Yet, little is known about how this ability develops from child to adulthood. To gain insight into how children (in comparison to adults) handle different kinds of linguistic information during on-line language comprehension, the current study investigates a well-known morphological phenomenon that is subject to both structural and semantic constraints, the plurals-in-compounds effect, i.e. the dislike of plural (specifically regular plural) modifiers inside compounds (e.g. rats eater). We examined 96 seven-to-twelve-year-old children and a control group of 32 adults measuring their eye-gaze changes in response to compound-internal plural and singular forms. Our results indicate that children rely more upon structural properties of language (in the present case, morphological cues) early in development and that the ability to efficiently integrate information from multiple sources takes time for children to reach adult-like levels.}, language = {en} } @article{vandeKootSilvaFelseretal.2015, author = {van de Koot, Hans and Silva, Renita and Felser, Claudia and Sato, Mikako}, title = {Does Dutch a-scrambling involve movement? Evidence from antecedent priming}, series = {The linguistic review}, volume = {32}, journal = {The linguistic review}, number = {4}, publisher = {De Gruyter Mouton}, address = {Berlin}, issn = {0167-6318}, doi = {10.1515/tlr-2015-0010}, pages = {739 -- 776}, year = {2015}, abstract = {The present study focuses on A-scrambling in Dutch, a local word-order alternation that typically signals the discourse-anaphoric status of the scrambled constituent. We use cross-modal priming to investigate whether an A-scrambled direct object gives rise to antecedent reactivation effects in the position where a movement theory would postulate a trace. Our results indicate that this is not the case, thereby providing support for a base-generation analysis of A-scrambling in Dutch.}, language = {en} } @misc{vandeKootSilvaFelseretal., author = {van de Koot, Hans and Silva, Renita and Felser, Claudia and Sato, Mikako}, title = {Does Dutch a-scrambling involve movement?}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-398566}, pages = {38}, abstract = {The present study focuses on A-scrambling in Dutch, a local word-order alternation that typically signals the discourse-anaphoric status of the scrambled constituent. We use cross-modal priming to investigate whether an A-scrambled direct object gives rise to antecedent reactivation effects in the position where a movement theory would postulate a trace. Our results indicate that this is not the case, thereby providing support for a base-generation analysis of A-scrambling in Dutch.}, language = {en} }