Article

The effect of noun phrase length on the form of referring expressions

Details

Citation

Karimi H, Fukumura K, Ferreira F & Pickering MJ (2014) The effect of noun phrase length on the form of referring expressions. Memory and Cognition, 42 (6), pp. 993-1009. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13421-014-0400-7

Abstract
The length of a noun phrase has been shown to influence choices such as syntactic role assignment (e.g., whether the noun phrase is realized as the subject or the object). But does length also affect the choice between different forms of referring expressions? Three experiments investigated the effect of antecedent length on the choice between pronouns (e.g., he) and repeated nouns (e.g., the actor) using a sentence-continuation paradigm. Experiments 1 and 2 found an effect of antecedent length on written continuations: Participants used more pronouns (relative to repeated nouns) when the antecedent was longer than when it was shorter. Experiment 3 used a spoken continuation task and replicated the effect of antecedent length on the choice of referring expressions. Taken together, the results suggest that longer antecedents increase the likelihood of pronominal reference. The results support theories arguing that length enhances the accessibility of the associated entity through richer semantic encoding.

Keywords
Length; Language production; Referring expressions; Accessibility

Journal
Memory and Cognition: Volume 42, Issue 6

StatusPublished
Publication date31/08/2014
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/26642
PublisherSpringer
ISSN0090-502X

People (1)

People

Dr Kumiko Fukumura

Dr Kumiko Fukumura

Lecturer, Psychology