Exploring interactions between semantic and syntactic processes: The role of animacy in syntactic priming

•We examine the role of animacy in syntactic priming of passives in children.•Syntactic priming effects are boosted by animacy in production of passives.•Most passives are produced when both prime and target have animate patients.•Results point to an interaction between semantic processes and struct...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of experimental child psychology Vol. 138; pp. 15 - 30
Main Authors Gámez, Perla B., Vasilyeva, Marina
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 01.10.2015
Elsevier BV
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Summary:•We examine the role of animacy in syntactic priming of passives in children.•Syntactic priming effects are boosted by animacy in production of passives.•Most passives are produced when both prime and target have animate patients.•Results point to an interaction between semantic processes and structural priming. The current study addressed the relation between syntactic and semantic processes during language production in 5- and 6-year-old children. A priming paradigm was used to examine children’s production of passives in describing transitive scenes (target pictures) following exposure to the experimenter’s sentences (primes). The key question was whether the tendency to repeat the syntactic form of the prime was affected by the animacy features in the prime and the target picture. In Experiment 1, children heard either passive or active primes with varied animacy configurations (e.g., animate patient/inanimate agent vs. inanimate patient/animate agent). The animacy features of the prime matched those of the target. Similar to prior studies, results showed a greater use of passives following passive, as opposed to active, primes. Critically, the difference between the two priming conditions varied as a function of animacy; it was larger when the prime and the target included an animate patient/inanimate agent than with the reversed animacy. In Experiment 2, the animacy configuration of the prime either matched or did not match that of the target. Results showed a greater likelihood of producing a passive when the target picture contained an animate patient versus an inanimate patient, and this effect was stronger when the prime had the same animacy features. The findings indicating that syntactic priming is moderated by animacy are discussed in the broader context of understanding the role of semantics in guiding the choice of syntactic structure.
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ISSN:0022-0965
1096-0457
DOI:10.1016/j.jecp.2015.04.009