L1 and L2 syntactic ambiguity resolution of relative clauses

Syntactic ambiguity resolution is a cognitive mechanism that interacts with a range oflinguistic skills vital to comprehension. Research in this area has, for most of the time, involved European languages. Meanwhile, there is scant literature on a vast range of languages that possess distinct typolo...

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Main Author: Rentillo, Philip Adrianne A.
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Published: Animo Repository 2021
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/11110
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-106612023-10-19T01:39:08Z L1 and L2 syntactic ambiguity resolution of relative clauses Rentillo, Philip Adrianne A. Syntactic ambiguity resolution is a cognitive mechanism that interacts with a range oflinguistic skills vital to comprehension. Research in this area has, for most of the time, involved European languages. Meanwhile, there is scant literature on a vast range of languages that possess distinct typological features that may hold an important role in unique and underexplored syntactic processes. Basing upon the Garden-Path Model, this study identifies attachment preference in two less explored languages, Tagalog and Kinaray-a, and in L2 English through relative clause parsing experiments. This also attempts to determine whether adjectival modification of noun phrases has a relationship with attachment preference scores. Chi-square tests of independence were conducted on experimental data and revealed a minimal relationship between select types of relative clauses according to adjectival modification and attachment preference. Data show contrasting patterns between Tagalog and Kinaray-a groups, where the former marginally lean towards low attachment (N2) and the latter towards high attachment (NI). Similar to Kinaray­a L2 English attachment preference takes the N 1 path, a contradiction to past findings on L 1 English. 2021-06-01T07:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/11110 Faculty Research Work Animo Repository Tagalog language—Syntax Kinaray-a language—Syntax English language—Philippines—Syntax Tagalog language—Relative clauses Kinaray-a language—Relative clauses English language—Philippines—Relative clauses English Language and Literature South and Southeast Asian Languages and Societies
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic Tagalog language—Syntax
Kinaray-a language—Syntax
English language—Philippines—Syntax
Tagalog language—Relative clauses
Kinaray-a language—Relative clauses
English language—Philippines—Relative clauses
English Language and Literature
South and Southeast Asian Languages and Societies
spellingShingle Tagalog language—Syntax
Kinaray-a language—Syntax
English language—Philippines—Syntax
Tagalog language—Relative clauses
Kinaray-a language—Relative clauses
English language—Philippines—Relative clauses
English Language and Literature
South and Southeast Asian Languages and Societies
Rentillo, Philip Adrianne A.
L1 and L2 syntactic ambiguity resolution of relative clauses
description Syntactic ambiguity resolution is a cognitive mechanism that interacts with a range oflinguistic skills vital to comprehension. Research in this area has, for most of the time, involved European languages. Meanwhile, there is scant literature on a vast range of languages that possess distinct typological features that may hold an important role in unique and underexplored syntactic processes. Basing upon the Garden-Path Model, this study identifies attachment preference in two less explored languages, Tagalog and Kinaray-a, and in L2 English through relative clause parsing experiments. This also attempts to determine whether adjectival modification of noun phrases has a relationship with attachment preference scores. Chi-square tests of independence were conducted on experimental data and revealed a minimal relationship between select types of relative clauses according to adjectival modification and attachment preference. Data show contrasting patterns between Tagalog and Kinaray-a groups, where the former marginally lean towards low attachment (N2) and the latter towards high attachment (NI). Similar to Kinaray­a L2 English attachment preference takes the N 1 path, a contradiction to past findings on L 1 English.
format text
author Rentillo, Philip Adrianne A.
author_facet Rentillo, Philip Adrianne A.
author_sort Rentillo, Philip Adrianne A.
title L1 and L2 syntactic ambiguity resolution of relative clauses
title_short L1 and L2 syntactic ambiguity resolution of relative clauses
title_full L1 and L2 syntactic ambiguity resolution of relative clauses
title_fullStr L1 and L2 syntactic ambiguity resolution of relative clauses
title_full_unstemmed L1 and L2 syntactic ambiguity resolution of relative clauses
title_sort l1 and l2 syntactic ambiguity resolution of relative clauses
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2021
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/11110
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