This project tests specific hypotheses about dependencies between language comprehension and production, which are typically studied independently. The PI's production-distribution-comprehension (PDC) account holds that utterance planning choices during language production yield distributional patterns in the language, in which certain syntactic structures co-vary with particular word choices, messages, and discourse environments. Comprehenders, through statistical learning during prior comprehension experiences, become highly sensitive to these patterns, and this sensitivity guides comprehension processes. Thus, many aspects of comprehension can ultimately be traced to task demands related to language production.
Specific aims of the project include: (1) Link syntactic structure choice in production to mechanisms of sentence planning. (2) Compare the PDC account of comprehension to alternative views of relative clause interpretation. (3) Test the causal relations between production constraints, distributional patterns in the language, and comprehension performance. (4) Relate adult sentence comprehension to statistical learning. (5) Test the current limits of constraint-based models of language comprehension. The PDC approach offers a significant alternative to other views and also may inform language acquisition research by illuminating the role of distributional patterns in child language acquisition. The work also can inform language therapies for brain injured patients in several ways. First, sources of production difficulty are precisely investigated, as are accommodations that unimpaired speakers make in the face of this difficulty. Second, the project investigates the relationship between prior experience with a syntactic construction and comprehension difficulty, which can have implications for the amount and nature of practice that should be provided to patients to improve their comprehension of certain sentence types.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01HD047425-03
Application #
7226029
Study Section
Language and Communication Study Section (LCOM)
Program Officer
Mccardle, Peggy D
Project Start
2005-08-15
Project End
2009-05-31
Budget Start
2007-06-01
Budget End
2008-05-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2007
Total Cost
$168,217
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Wisconsin Madison
Department
Psychology
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
161202122
City
Madison
State
WI
Country
United States
Zip Code
53715
Montag, Jessica L; MacDonald, Maryellen C (2015) Text exposure predicts spoken production of complex sentences in 8- and 12-year-old children and adults. J Exp Psychol Gen 144:447-68
Montag, Jessica L; MacDonald, Maryellen C (2014) Visual salience modulates structure choice in relative clause production. Lang Speech 57:163-80
Mirkovi?, Jelena; Macdonald, Maryellen C (2013) When Singular and Plural are Both Grammatical: Semantic and Morphophonological Effects in Agreement. J Mem Lang 69:277-298
Gennari, Silvia P; Mirkovic, Jelena; Macdonald, Maryellen C (2012) Animacy and competition in relative clause production: a cross-linguistic investigation. Cogn Psychol 65:141-76
Acheson, Daniel J; Macdonald, Maryellen C (2011) The Rhymes that the Reader Perused Confused the Meaning: Phonological Effects during On-line Sentence Comprehension. J Mem Lang 65:193-207
Stallings, Lynne M; MacDonald, Maryellen C (2011) It's not just the ""heavy NP"": relative phrase length modulates the production of heavy-NP shift. J Psycholinguist Res 40:177-87
Acheson, Daniel J; MacDonald, Maryellen C; Postle, Bradley R (2011) The effect of concurrent semantic categorization on delayed serial recall. J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn 37:44-59
Haskell, Todd R; Thornton, Robert; Macdonald, Maryellen C (2010) Experience and grammatical agreement: statistical learning shapes number agreement production. Cognition 114:151-64
Amato, Michael S; MacDonald, Maryellen C (2010) Sentence processing in an artificial language: Learning and using combinatorial constraints. Cognition 116:143-8
Acheson, Daniel J; Postle, Bradley R; Macdonald, Maryellen C (2010) The interaction of concreteness and phonological similarity in verbal working memory. J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn 36:17-36

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