The present dissertation investigated the mechanisms of incremental sentence processing in Japanese, a language with word order freedom (scrambling) and argument omissibility (pro-drop). To this avail, four event-related brain potential (ERP) experiments were conducted employing simple transitive sentences, with Experiments 1 and 2 investigating the influence of prosodic information and case marking on the processing of scrambled sentences, and Experiments 3 and 4 examining the processing of pro-drop sentences in isolation and embedded in linguistic contexts. The neurophysiological data pattern observed across experiments strongly suggested the separation of a phrase structural, interpretive, and discourse level of representation, with a un...
The present study tested whether the D-linked object moves from its thematic position over the subje...
The aim of this thesis is to show that not only syntactic representations play a role in the process...
The aim of this thesis is to show that not only syntactic representations play a role in the process...
The present dissertation investigated the mechanisms of incremental sentence processing in Japanese,...
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...
Note:In this thesis, sentence comprehension disturbances in Japanese aphasics are investigated, focu...
Three experiments investigated whether word order and case markers play a role in the native speaker...
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 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...
The Japanese language exhibits a free word-order phenomenon called scrambling. Because each noun phr...
Abstract Processing scrambled word order requires extra cognitive cost as revealed by previous studi...
The present study tested whether the D-linked object moves from its thematic position over the subje...
The aim of this thesis is to show that not only syntactic representations play a role in the process...
The aim of this thesis is to show that not only syntactic representations play a role in the process...
The present dissertation investigated the mechanisms of incremental sentence processing in Japanese,...
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...
Note:In this thesis, sentence comprehension disturbances in Japanese aphasics are investigated, focu...
Three experiments investigated whether word order and case markers play a role in the native speaker...
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 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...
The Japanese language exhibits a free word-order phenomenon called scrambling. Because each noun phr...
Abstract Processing scrambled word order requires extra cognitive cost as revealed by previous studi...
The present study tested whether the D-linked object moves from its thematic position over the subje...
The aim of this thesis is to show that not only syntactic representations play a role in the process...
The aim of this thesis is to show that not only syntactic representations play a role in the process...