The present study investigated the effects of phrase length and scrambling in the processing of Japanese sentences. Reading times of short phrases, long phrases, verbs, and whole sentences, measured by the method of self-paced reading, did not differ in terms of phrase-length order and scrambling. In addition, four types of sentences constructed on the basis of phrase-length order and scrambling did not affect duration times of correctness decision-making for sentences. However, error rates differed between canonical and scrambled sentences regardless of phrase-length order. This result implies that scrambled sentences were harder to judge as correct sentences than canonical sentences. Thus, scrambling affects the appropriate integration of...
In the emerging field of cross-linguistic studies on language production, one particularly interesti...
This thesis investigates the various syntactic sources of difficulty or ease in processing Japanese ...
In this paper I show how with syntax defined as the progressive projection of semantic representatio...
The present study investigated the effects of phrase length and scrambling in the processing of Japa...
The present study investigated the effects of phrase length and scrambling in the processing of Japa...
The present study investigated the effects of phrase length and scrambling in the processing of Japa...
1 The present study investigated the effects of phrase-length and scrambling in the processing of Ja...
The Japanese language exhibits a free word-order phenomenon called scrambling. Because each noun phr...
The present study investigated scrambling effects on the processing of Japanese sentences and priori...
The present study investigated scrambling effects on the processing of Japanese sentences and priori...
The present study investigated scrambling effects on the processing of Japanese sentences and priori...
The present study investigated scrambling effects on the processing of Japanese sentences and priori...
Although it has been claimed that the relative order among constituents in Japanese can be generally...
In the emerging field of cross-linguistic studies on language production, one particularly interesti...
Abstract Processing scrambled word order requires extra cognitive cost as revealed by previous studi...
In the emerging field of cross-linguistic studies on language production, one particularly interesti...
This thesis investigates the various syntactic sources of difficulty or ease in processing Japanese ...
In this paper I show how with syntax defined as the progressive projection of semantic representatio...
The present study investigated the effects of phrase length and scrambling in the processing of Japa...
The present study investigated the effects of phrase length and scrambling in the processing of Japa...
The present study investigated the effects of phrase length and scrambling in the processing of Japa...
1 The present study investigated the effects of phrase-length and scrambling in the processing of Ja...
The Japanese language exhibits a free word-order phenomenon called scrambling. Because each noun phr...
The present study investigated scrambling effects on the processing of Japanese sentences and priori...
The present study investigated scrambling effects on the processing of Japanese sentences and priori...
The present study investigated scrambling effects on the processing of Japanese sentences and priori...
The present study investigated scrambling effects on the processing of Japanese sentences and priori...
Although it has been claimed that the relative order among constituents in Japanese can be generally...
In the emerging field of cross-linguistic studies on language production, one particularly interesti...
Abstract Processing scrambled word order requires extra cognitive cost as revealed by previous studi...
In the emerging field of cross-linguistic studies on language production, one particularly interesti...
This thesis investigates the various syntactic sources of difficulty or ease in processing Japanese ...
In this paper I show how with syntax defined as the progressive projection of semantic representatio...