Publication | Closed Access
The Centrality of Metrical Structure in Signaling Information Structure: A Probabilistic Perspective
175
Citations
84
References
2010
Year
Metrical StructureEngineeringLanguage ExperienceExpected ProminenceProbabilistic PerspectiveInteraction NetworkNetwork AnalysisSyntactic StructurePhonologyCorpus LinguisticsLinguistic TheorySyntaxData ScienceSpeech ProsodyBiological NetworkProsody (Film Studies)Corpus AnalysisLanguage StudiesInformation TheoryGraphical ModelKnowledge DiscoveryProsody (Linguistics)Probability TheoryPragmaticsNetwork ScienceEntropyComputational BiologyInformation StructureRomance LanguagesRegulatory Network ModellingSystems BiologyLinguistics
This article introduces a new way to explain how information structure is signaled prosodically in English. I claim that METRICAL STRUCTURE plays a central role (Ladd 2008, Truckenbrodt 1995). Information structure (defined as in Steedman 1991 and Vallduví & Vilkuna 1998) places strong constraints on the PROBABIILISTIC mapping of words onto metrical prosodic structure—that is, foci usually align with nuclear accents and theme/rheme units with prosodic phrases, and themes are less metrically prominent than rhemes. It is shown that focus position, scope, and pragmatic interpretation are then derived by manipulating EXPECTED PROMINENCE within metrical structure. Broadly, the more prominent a word than expected, the more likely a contrastive reading; the less prominent, the more likely a givenness reading. Both constructed and naturally occurring examples from the Switchboard corpus are used.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1