Fictive Motion in the Domain of Light
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Transcript Fictive Motion in the Domain of Light
Rethinking Coercion as a Cognitive
Phenomenon:
Processing, Frequency, and Semantic Compatibility
Suzanne Kemmer
Rice University
Soyeon Yoon
Seoul National University/
Rice University
ICLC-12, Edmonton, June 2013
Coercion
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Resolution of semantic incompatibility between a
construction and a lexical item occurring in it
(Michaelis 2005)
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•
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Give me some pillow!
I sneezed the napkin off the table.
I’m liking it.
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A contextual reinterpretation that occurs when
semantic specifications clash (Pustejovsky) –
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An adjustment of specifications “repairs the mismatch”
(de Swart)
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“Special meaning effects” (de Swart)
Issues with coercion as
typically conceived
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Changes in binary feature specifications
(Michaelis 2005; de Swart 2000) are inconsistent
with a frame-based, gradient semantics
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It is not clear how the coercion ‘mechanism’
relates to online processing or other aspects
of language use:
-- Theories (Construction Grammar; formal grammars)
are generally either silent or inexplicit about how
processing relates (but see Traxler et al. 2002, Piñango et al.
1999, Piñango et al. 2006).
--or, they explicitly divorce language structure from
processing (e.g. Sign-based Construction Grammar).
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Usage-based Model:
Correlation of Four Dimensions
General prediction (Kemmer 2008 following from Langacker
1987, 1990, 2000 inter alia.)
There should be some correlation between:
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Semantic compatibility of a host construction with lexical item
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Frequency of use (distributional/behavioral correlate of
cognitive entrenchment)
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Processing time
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Acceptability judgments
How much? How does it play out? An empirical question.
But an empirically-demonstrated overall correlation will support the usagebased model as described by Langacker: dynamic, gradient, integrated
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Why?
Semantic compatibility;
Frequency;
Processing;
Acceptability
--Why and how should these relate?
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Interrelation of 4
dimensions
In a dynamic usage-based language system:
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Greatest semantic compatibility: Maximal
conventionality, minimal semantic extension; schemas and
exemplars fit together in their specifications, no clash
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Frequency: Constructions are schematizations over many
exemplars; they derive exactly from repetition of
exemplars that (therefore) best fit them. Highly frequent
exemplars are analogical attractors for novel exemplars of
less frequency and less compatibility – including coercions
Interrelation, cont.
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Processing: Generally, cognitive mismatches should be
harder to process. Specifically, in a cognitive competition
model, ambivalence/difficulty of categorization should take
more time. Also--a well-known property of cognition: the
more frequent the experience, the easier (and therefore
faster) it is to process.
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Acceptability judgments: Speakers like most what they have
most heard before: schemas with their usual exemplars in
prototypical relations. Minimal mismatches. (Boas 2011 shows
relation of coercion, semantic compatibility, and variable acceptability)
All subject to incremental change over time; and construction and its
conventional and productive uses developing as the individual’s
language system matures.
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Investigated for one
construction in Yoon (2012)
English Ditransitive Construction [V NP1 NP2]
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Sally gave John the book.
Constructional meaning: transfer of possession
from an Agent to a Recipient
The criteria of semantic compatibility
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•
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the number of participants in the prototypical
event scene of the verb
the possibility that the Patient is transferrable
as a result of the action prototypically
designated by the verb (e.g. kill)
Semantic compatibility
of verbs in Ditransitive Construction (DC)
Semantic Compatibility
(1 most, 5 least)
Semantic Type
of Verb
Eg.
SemCom1
Inherent transfer
give, send
SemCom2
Potential transfer
cook, find
SemCom3
Prevented transfer
refuse, deny
SemCom4
Impossible transfer
cut, break
SemCom5
Events internal to
think, stay
the Agent
Categories 1-3 based on Pinker (1989) and Goldberg (1995)
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More verbs to be examined
Verbs said to not occur with the DC (Goldberg 1995: 128)
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•
•
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Verbs of fulfilling (X gives something to Y that Y deserves, needs, or
is worthy of)
present, donate, provide
Verbs of continuous causation of accompanied motion in some
manner
pull, carry, push
Verbs of manner of speaking
shout, murmur, whisper
Verbs of proposition and propositional attitude
say, claim
Verbs of choosing
choose, pick
1. Frequency of verbs in DC
Method
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Collexeme Analysis (Stefanowitsch and Gries 2003)
Corpus
• BNC, spoken subcorpus - ca.
1,450,000 words
• # of DC exemplars: 1,374
• # of verbs used in the DC: 49
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Result
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Verbs more compatible with the DC
tend to be more frequently associated
with the DC (higher collostructional
rank).
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Verbs less compatible tend to occur
less frequently in the DC or do not
occur at all.
Table shows the relation:
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Compatibility and
Collostructional Rank
Compatibility
Average
# of verbs
Collostruction rank
found
SemCom 1
SemCom2
SemCom3
SemCom4
SemCom5
17
33
29
34
25
20
2
0
2
Examples
give, send, tell
buy, make, find
refuse, deny
run, wish
Verbs and collostructional
rank
Next chart shows relation of specific
semantic classes of verbs (and their
individual verbs) and collostructional
rank
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2. Processing effort and
acceptability judgments (DC)
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Experiment Design
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Stimuli
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35 verbs selected from semantic
compatibility categories and result of corpus
analysis
35 sentences where each verb was used as a
main verb in the DC
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(1) Eddie told Kim the news last month. (tell from
SemCom1)
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(2) Billy found Jane the ring six days ago. (find from
SemCom2)
Design, cont.
Task
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27 participants read the sentences in a selfpaced reading task.
The time taken to read the second NP
(underlined in (1) and (2)) was recorded.
Acceptability judgments
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After reading each sentence, the participants
judged its naturalness on 7-point-scale.
Verb semantic class (from 1, most
compatible, to 5, least compatible)
1. Verbs of inherent transfer
Verb subclass
Inherently signifying giving
Communication
Instrument of communication
Future having
Selected
verbs
give
tell
fax
owe, promise,
leave, allow
2. Verbs of possible transfer
Sending
Deictic
Ballistic motion
Creation
Obtaining
send
bring
throw, drop
create, cook
find, buy, rent
(hire in BE)
3. Verbs of refused transfer
Refusal
refuse, deny
4. Verbs of impossible/impaired transfer Damaging
5. Verbs of events internal to the Agent
Verbs occurring only in the corpus
(placed in 2nd most compatible)
Verbs that were expected not to occur
in the DC (the least compatible)
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Emotion/cognition/desire
break, cut
think, want,
wish
intransitive
stay, sneeze
Location
put, set
General causation
cause
present, donate, provide, push, whisper, say, choose
Result
Significant trend
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If semantically less compatible,
processed slower
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Judged as less acceptable
Semantic compatibility with processing
time; with acceptability judgments
900
7
880
6
860
5
840
4
820
3
800
2
780
y = 19.336x + 780.1
R² = 0.6582
760
740
SemCom1 SemCom2 SemCom3 SemCom4 SemCom5
Average processing time of each semantic
compatibility category
(Linear Trend: t(26) = 3.02, p < .01)
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1
0
y = 1.067x + 0.675
R² = 0.8457
SemCom1 SemCom2 SemCom3 SemCom4 SemCom5
Average naturalness score of each
semantic compatibility category
(Linear Trend: t(26) = 30.29, p < .001)
Excluding outliers (misclassified?) put, set, and cause
A more linear trend
900
7
880
860
6
give, fax, allow, bring
5
840
4
820
3
800
2
780
y = 21.968x + 766.94
R² = 0.6542
760
740
SemCom1 SemCom2 SemCom3 SemCom4 SemCom5
Average processing time of each semantic
compatibility category (excluding put, set,
and cause)
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1
0
y = 1.16x + 0.21
R² = 0.9151
SemCom1 SemCom2 SemCom3 SemCom4 SemCom5
Average naturalness score of each semantic
compatibility category (excluding put, set,
and cause)
Correlation of Four Dimensions
(DC)
All four aspects were significantly correlated with each other.
(*p < .01, **p < .001) SemCom
SemCom
ColloRank
NatScore
ProcessingT
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.42**
.54**
.09*
ColloRank
.41**
.12 **
NatScore ProcessingT
.13**
Gradient Nature of Coercion
If semantic compatibility is gradable, will coercion be the
same for all different degrees of semantic compatibility?
No, coercion is also gradable:
Kelly sent Ryan the card.
Billy found Jane the ring.
Larry refused Kim the lunch.
Jean broke David the bread.
Ricky stayed Sue the space.
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Semantic compatibility correlates with:
• how often the resolved co-occurrences are used
• how difficult the resolution is to process
• how natural the speakers feel the co-occurrences are
Coercion, Usage, Processing
Coercion is closely related with usage,
specifically, processing.
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In comprehension, speaker requires different
amounts of actual processing effort, depending
on the amount of semantic incompatibility.
Coercion can be thought of not as a theoretical
mechanism in the “grammar”, separate from
processing (and usage in general) but as part of
an actual psychological process during language
use: resolving semantic incompatibility online in usage
events
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Directionality of coercion
Semantics of the target lexical item and
the construction
Sometimes, the meaning of a lexical item
overrides the constructional meaning.
challenges Override Principle (Michaelis 2005)
claiming construction always coerces lexical
item
Larry refused Kim the lunch.
Kevin caused Liz the fire.
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Linguistic and extralinguistic
context affect coercion
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Linguistic context
Sometimes, coercion is easier with particular linguistic
contexts – particularly V NP collocations (via activation of
general or specific frames)
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Extra-linguistic context
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Speakers try to resolve the incompatibility by exploiting
extra-linguistic context.
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Larry owed Jane the watch. vs. Larry owed Jane $10.
Kevin caused Liz the fire. vs. Kevin caused Liz trouble.
David broke Jean the bread.
She squinted into the room. (Kemmer 2008)
What is coercion, really?
What people call “coercion” is a subcase of dynamic
semantic integration of constructional schemas, lexical
schemas, their associated conventional frames, and
contextual elements
--where the incompatibility is noticeable (there’s some violation of
a generalization that works in prototypical cases)
--during syntactic/semantic composition of open-slot
constructions with lexical items
(purely semantic composition/resolution as in colorless green
ideas, has not been of much interest in modern Linguistics).
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Why investigate coercions in
particular?
Relevance:
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Coercions are relatively novel motivated usages that partly
conform to an existing constructional schema. Thus they are
relevant to syntax.
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We can closely observe the synchronic grammar and its processing
at an interesting point: where conventionalization of a construction
is intermediate, and it works with some classes of lexical items but
not others.
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Diachrony: Emergence and change of constructions can be studied.
As exemplars of a particular type become more entrenched, the
construction changes its specifications (cf. Israel 1996).
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Acquisition: Can investigate learning of a construction and
expansion to new lexical items/classes of lexical items.
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Variation: Can observe variation among and within speakers.
Conclusions
Coercion is a concept widely invoked to
allow for/explain semantic mismatches and
to argue for existence of constructions.
We conclude:
1. Since theoretical ideas rest on it, its
nature should be more closely investigated.
2. Coercion is a gradient cognitive process
reflected in variable processing time. It is not
a unitary or “all or nothing” device or
process.
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Conclusions
3. Coercion is the set of syntactically
relevant subtypes of the dynamic process of
semantic integration of:
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conventional linguistic specifications
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frame-based knowledge not specific to
language
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contextual elements
This general process occurs in language usage in
general, not just in syntactic constructions noticed by
linguists.
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Coercion
Phenomena given the name “coercion” are disparate, e.g.:
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“NP-coercion” – specifically mass construed as unit (Give me a beer) –
is highly conventionalized in English
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A schema with semantics ‘conventionally unitized drink’ has entrenched
exemplars with particular lexical items associated with particular
frames; is compatible with count noun constructions (singular indef. article,
pluralization); and can be licensed for non-conventionalized nouns (new
drink names, masses not usually unitized etc.), in contexts activating the
frames associated with the schema
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Under usage-based model, entrenched cases like a beer do not actually
involve coercion. They are expected to be processed more quickly,
show higher frequency, and have greater acceptability than found in
cases of real incompatibility (genuine coercions)
Conclusions
4. Coercion can be investigated for specific
constructions, but we need to take into account
the degree of entrenchment of relevant
constructional schemas, specific and general.
Doing so will provide:
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A more general and accurate description of coercion
phenomena
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Stronger theoretical grounding
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Natural relation to acquisition, synchronic variation,
and diachrony
References
Boas, Hans. 2011. Coercion and leaking argument structures in Construction Grammar. Linguistics 49-6.
De Swart, Henriëtte. 2000. Tense, aspect and coercion in a cross-linguistic perspective. Proceedings of the Berkeley Formal Grammar Conference. Stanford: CSLI Publications.
Goldberg, Adele. 1995. Constructions: A Construction Grammar approach to argument structure. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Israel, Michael. 1996. The Way-Constructions Grow. In Adele Goldberg, ed., Conceptual Structure, Discourse, and Language. Stanford: CSLI.
Kemmer, Suzanne. 2008. New dimensions of dimensions: Frequency, productivity, domains and coercion. Presented at Cognitive Linguistics: Between Universality and Variation.
Dubrovnik, Croatia.
Langacker, Ronald. 1987. Foundations of Cognitive Grammar. Vol. I. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Langacker, Ronald. 1990. A usage-based model. Chapter 10 of Concept, Image and Symbol: The Cognitive Basis of Grammar , 261-288. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
Langacker, Ronald. 2000. A dynamic usage-based model. In Michael Barlow and Suzanne Kemmer, eds. Usage-based Models of language, 1-63. Stanford: CSLI.
Michaelis, Laura A. 2005. Entity and event coercion in a symbolic theory of syntax. In Jan-Ola Østman and Miriam Fried, Eds. Construction Grammar(s): Cognitive Grounding and
Theoretical Extensions. (Constructional Approaches to Language 3.) Amsterdam: Benjamins.
Piñango, M.M., A.E. Zurif, and Ray Jackendoff, 1999. Real-time processing implications of aspectual coercion at the syntax-semantics interface. Journal of Psycholinguistic
Research 28, 395-414.
Piñango, M.M.,A. Winnick, R. Ullah, and E. Zurif. 2006. Time-course of semantic composition: The case of aspectual coercion. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research 35, 233-244.
Pinker, Steven. 1989. Learnability and Cognition: The acquisition of argument structure. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
Pustejovsky, J. 1995. Linguistic Constraints on Type Coercion. In P. Saint-Dizier and E. Viegas (eds.), Computational Lexical Semantics, 71-97. Cambridge; New York; Melbourne:
Cambridge University Press.
Stefanowitsch, Anatol, and Stefan Gries. 2003. Collostructions: Investigating the interaction of words and constructions. International Journal of Corpus Linguistics 8, 209-243.
Traxler, M. J., M. J. Pickering, and B. McElree. 2002. Coercion in sentence processing: Evidence from eye-movements and self-paced reading. Journal of Memory and Language
47, 530-547.
Yoon, Soyeon. 2012. Constructions, Semantic Compatibility and Coercion: An empirical usage-based approach. Doctoral dissertation, Dept. of Linguistics, Rice University.
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Additional Slides
Details on regressions.
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Details: Regressions
correlating the factors
Regression 1
y NatScore = .79xSemCom + .03xColloRank + .001x ProcessingT – 2.87
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(p <.001) (p < .001) (p < .05)
Semantically less compatible construction and verb
Less frequently used together
Processed with more effort
Judged less acceptable
More coercion
Regression 2
yProcessingT = 7.79xSemCom + 1.47xColloRank – 67.72
(p = .22)
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(p < .01)
Multiple Regression
Unstandardized Standardized
p
coefficient
coefficient
Step 1 Constant
-34.70
SemCom
15.37
.09
p < .01
Step 2 Constant
-67.72
SemCom
7.79
.04
p = .218
ColloRank
1.47
.10
p < .01
ProcessingT
ColloRank
SemCom
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r2 = .01 ( p < .01)
r2 = .02 ( p < .001)