Object Attraction in Subject-Verb Agreement Construction

Author(s)
Hartsuiker, Robert
Anton-Mendez, Ines
van Zee, Marijke
Publication Date
2001
Abstract
Three experiments in which errors of subject–verb agreement were elicited assessed the effects of syntactic function and part of speech of the constituent appearing immediately before the verb. Bock and Miller (1991) have shown that constituents modifying the subject exert an "attraction effect," an increased rate of agreement errors when that constituent has a grammatical number different from that of the subject head noun. Experiment 1a, conducted in Dutch, showed that such an attraction effect is not restricted to sentences in which the number mismatching information is embedded within the subject: Direct-object noun phrases exert an attraction effect as well, although a smaller one than subject modifier noun phrases. Experiment 1b replicated this effect with new materials, excluding a possible confound with plausibility of the sentences. Experiment 2 showed that direct-object 'pronouns' exert an attraction effect about as strong as that observed with nouns, unless the pronoun is explicitly case-marked. In such circumstances no attraction effect obtains. These results are interpreted within the hypothesis that the number of phrasal nodes intervening between "attractor" and subject head noun determines the strength of attraction effects.
Citation
Journal of Memory and Language, 45(4), p. 546-572
ISSN
0749-596X
Link
Publisher
Academic Press
Title
Object Attraction in Subject-Verb Agreement Construction
Type of document
Journal Article
Entity Type
Publication

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