Title of article
Childrenʹs command of quantification
Author/Authors
Lidz، نويسنده , , Jeffrey and Musolino، نويسنده , , Julien، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Pages
42
From page
113
To page
154
Abstract
In this article we present data from two sets of experiments designed to investigate how children and adult speakers of English and Kannada (Dravidian) interpret scopally ambiguous sentences containing numerally quantified noun phrases and negation (e.g. Donald didnʹt find two guys). We use this kind of sentence as a way to find evidence in childrenʹs linguistic representations for the hierarchical structure and the abstract relations defined over these structures (in particular, the relation of c-command) that linguists take to be at the core of grammatical knowledge. Specifically, we uncover the existence of systematic differences in the way that children and adult speakers resolve these ambiguities, independent of the language they speak. That is, while adults can easily access either scope interpretation, 4-year-old children display a strong preference for the scopal interpretation of the quantified elements which corresponds to their surface syntactic position. Crucially, however, we show that childrenʹs interpretations are constrained by the surface hierarchical relations (i.e. the c-command relations) between these elements and not by their linear order. Childrenʹs non-adult interpretations are therefore informative about the nature of the syntactic representations they entertain and the rules they use to determine the meaning of a sentence from its structure.
Keywords
Language acquisition , Cross-linguistic , Quantifier scope , ambiguity resolution , Negation , c-command , Kannada
Journal title
Cognition
Serial Year
2002
Journal title
Cognition
Record number
2075569
Link To Document