The weight effect in English Heavy Noun Phrase Shift (HNPS) is relative and prosodic in nature. Based on this observation, this paper proposes a measure of weight which predicts that an HNPS sentence is acceptable when the sentence-final NP contains more prosodic words than the element shifted over by the NP. This proposal is based on the assumption that the weight effect is a processing-motivated phenomenon (Hawkins 1994)
Two acceptability judgment experiments are presented which investigate extraposition of PPs out of N...
The present study aims to examine whether pronoun production is influenced by referent frequency. We...
Stress is a useful cue for English word segmentation. A wide range of computational models have foun...
Heavy noun phrase shift refers to the phenomenon where a “heavy ” noun phrase (NP) is displaced to t...
Grammars frequently categorize syllables for prosodic purposes, treating one class as heavier (e.g. ...
International audienceStudies on constituent ordering preferences have pointed out the tendency to p...
In weight-sensitive languages, stress is influenced by syllable weight. As a result, heavy syllables...
Many languages, including Norwegian, exhibit CVC weight asymmetry: CVC is usually heavy but behaves...
When we engage in conversation, it is necessary to order our speech so that others can understand us...
In this article. I examine the effect of the length of constituents on phonology and syntax within a...
This paper presents a study of the effect of working memory load on the interpretation of pro-nouns ...
In weight-sensitive languages, stress is influenced by syllable weight. As a result, heavy syllables ...
This paper tests the validity of the Implicit Prosody Hypothesis (IPH) (Fodor 1998, 2002) based on p...
In an artificial language setting, we investigated the relative weight of statistical cues (transiti...
This dissertation examines word accent assignment in phonological, lexical and mixed accent systems ...
Two acceptability judgment experiments are presented which investigate extraposition of PPs out of N...
The present study aims to examine whether pronoun production is influenced by referent frequency. We...
Stress is a useful cue for English word segmentation. A wide range of computational models have foun...
Heavy noun phrase shift refers to the phenomenon where a “heavy ” noun phrase (NP) is displaced to t...
Grammars frequently categorize syllables for prosodic purposes, treating one class as heavier (e.g. ...
International audienceStudies on constituent ordering preferences have pointed out the tendency to p...
In weight-sensitive languages, stress is influenced by syllable weight. As a result, heavy syllables...
Many languages, including Norwegian, exhibit CVC weight asymmetry: CVC is usually heavy but behaves...
When we engage in conversation, it is necessary to order our speech so that others can understand us...
In this article. I examine the effect of the length of constituents on phonology and syntax within a...
This paper presents a study of the effect of working memory load on the interpretation of pro-nouns ...
In weight-sensitive languages, stress is influenced by syllable weight. As a result, heavy syllables ...
This paper tests the validity of the Implicit Prosody Hypothesis (IPH) (Fodor 1998, 2002) based on p...
In an artificial language setting, we investigated the relative weight of statistical cues (transiti...
This dissertation examines word accent assignment in phonological, lexical and mixed accent systems ...
Two acceptability judgment experiments are presented which investigate extraposition of PPs out of N...
The present study aims to examine whether pronoun production is influenced by referent frequency. We...
Stress is a useful cue for English word segmentation. A wide range of computational models have foun...