Startseite Linguistik & Semiotik The Role of Prosody in the Processing of Ambiguities in Brazilian Portuguese
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The Role of Prosody in the Processing of Ambiguities in Brazilian Portuguese

A Visual World Paradigm Study
  • René Alain Santana de Almeida , Reinier Cozijn und Miguel Oliveira Jr
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Prosodic Interfaces
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch Prosodic Interfaces

Abstract

The present paper aims to analyze the role of prosody in the resolution of a global ambiguity in sentences of the type NP1 – V – NP2 – Adverb of place – Adverb of intensity (bastante / ‘very’) – Attribute (O guitarrista recebeu o baterista no quarto bastante drogado / ‘The guitarist received the drummer in the room very drugged’), in Brazilian Portuguese. We consider the hypothesis that prosodic cues, such as focus and pause, aid in the process of disambiguation and that, such cues may also contribute to anticipating the preference for a referent even before the attribute is uttered. The experimental paradigm of this study used online measurements resulting from the method of the visual world paradigm, with auditory and visual stimuli, through eye tracking. The recordings were acoustically manipulated in Praat (Boersma 2001). Upon hearing the segment bastante / ‘very’, the preference from participants for the NP1 increased significantly, in the conditions in which there was prosodic manipulation, even before the adjective was processed. The results suggest that focus and pause are independent factors that influence the anaphoric preference very early during processing.

Abstract

The present paper aims to analyze the role of prosody in the resolution of a global ambiguity in sentences of the type NP1 – V – NP2 – Adverb of place – Adverb of intensity (bastante / ‘very’) – Attribute (O guitarrista recebeu o baterista no quarto bastante drogado / ‘The guitarist received the drummer in the room very drugged’), in Brazilian Portuguese. We consider the hypothesis that prosodic cues, such as focus and pause, aid in the process of disambiguation and that, such cues may also contribute to anticipating the preference for a referent even before the attribute is uttered. The experimental paradigm of this study used online measurements resulting from the method of the visual world paradigm, with auditory and visual stimuli, through eye tracking. The recordings were acoustically manipulated in Praat (Boersma 2001). Upon hearing the segment bastante / ‘very’, the preference from participants for the NP1 increased significantly, in the conditions in which there was prosodic manipulation, even before the adjective was processed. The results suggest that focus and pause are independent factors that influence the anaphoric preference very early during processing.

Heruntergeladen am 11.12.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783111060309-002/html?lang=de
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