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Is word-order similarity necessary for cross-linguistic structural priming?
75
Citations
25
References
2013
Year
English Passive SentencesLanguage ExperienceNeurolinguisticsPsycholinguisticsWord-order SimilaritySyntactic StructureCorpus LinguisticsSocial SciencesLinguistic TheoryApplied LinguisticsSyntaxComputational LinguisticsGrammarLanguage StudiesCross-linguistic Structural PrimingCognitive ScienceCross-linguistic Syntactic PrimingPragmaticsDistributional SemanticsLanguage ScienceSecond Language StudiesLinguistics
This article presents two experiments employing two structural priming paradigms that investigated whether cross-linguistic syntactic priming occurred in Chinese and English passive sentences that differ in word order (production-to-production priming in Experiment 1 and comprehension-to-production priming in Experiment 2). Results revealed that cross-linguistic syntactic priming occurred in Chinese and English passive sentences, regardless of production of primes or comprehension of primes and language direction (L1–L2 or L2–L1). Our findings indicate that word-order similarity between languages is not necessary for cross-linguistic structural priming, supporting the view of a two-stage model of language production.
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