Wisman Weil Lisa, Leonard Laurence B
Boston University.
Purdue University.
J Child Lang. 2017 Jul;44(4):943-967. doi: 10.1017/S0305000916000337.
This study employed a paired priming paradigm to ask whether input features influence a child's propensity to use non-nominative versus nominative case in subject position, and to use non-nominative forms even when verbs are marked for agreement. Thirty English-speaking children (ages 2;6 to 3;7) heard sentences with pronouns that had non-contrasting case forms (e.g. Dad hugs it and it hugs Tigger) and it was hypothesized that these forms would lead to more errors (e.g. Him hugs Barney) in an elicited phrase more often than if the children heard contrasting case forms (e.g. Dad hugs us and we hug the doggie). Tense/agreement features were also examined in children's elicited productions. The findings were consistent with predictions, and supported the input ambiguity hypothesis of Pelham (2011). Implications for current accounts of the optional infinitive stage are discussed.
本研究采用配对启动范式,以探究输入特征是否会影响儿童在主语位置使用非主格与主格格位的倾向,以及即使动词带有一致标记时仍使用非主格形式的倾向。30名说英语的儿童(年龄在2岁6个月至3岁7个月之间)听了带有代词的句子,这些代词的格形式没有对比(例如“爸爸拥抱它,它拥抱跳跳虎”),研究假设,与儿童听到对比性格形式的句子(例如“爸爸拥抱我们,我们拥抱小狗”)相比,这些形式会更频繁地在引出短语中导致更多错误(例如“他拥抱巴尼”)。研究还考察了儿童引出表达中的时态/一致特征。研究结果与预测一致,并支持了佩勒姆(2011年)的输入歧义假设。文中讨论了对当前关于可选不定式阶段观点的启示。