October 16 th 2015, Budapest Workshop on Linguistic and Cognitive - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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October 16 th 2015, Budapest Workshop on Linguistic and Cognitive - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

October 16 th 2015, Budapest Workshop on Linguistic and Cognitive aspects of Quantification The semantics and the acquisition of the distributive marker po , which is notorious, (common to Slavic and has very broad distribution); our


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October 16th 2015, Budapest Workshop on Linguistic and Cognitive aspects of Quantification

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 The semantics and the acquisition of the

distributive marker po, which is notorious, (common to Slavic and has very broad distribution);

 our focus – po combining with numerals

in different argument positions (subject and object)

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 What is the semantics of po?  How do adults and children understand

sentences with po combining with numerals (po-numerals)?

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 a universal distributive quantifier (each)  a distributive-share marker (Choe 1987)  a distance-distributive marker (Zimmermann 2002)  a pluractional marker (Newman 1990, Lasersohn 1995)?

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 Part 1: po is not a universal quantifier  Part 2: po quantifies over events  Part 3: experiment  Part 4: discussion

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(i) Three kids are riding a horse.

Distributive Collective

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 Most of the data come from the

languages with the universal distributive quantifier (e.g. each) (i) Three kids are riding a horse. Distributive: each of the three kids is riding a horse

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PO IS NOT A UNIVERSAL QUANTIFIER

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(1) Tri devojčice drže dva balona.

three girls hold two balloons

‘Three girls hold two balloons.’

collective: together distributive: separately/each

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(2) Tri devojčice drže po dva balona.

three girls hold po two balloons

‘Three girls hold two balloons separately/each.’

‘Three girls hold two balloons at separate

locations/time intervals.’

# collective: together distributive: separately/each distributive: at separate locations/time intervals

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participant distributive ‘Three girls hold two balloons separately/each.’ > distribution is over event participants (girls) (cf. Cable 2014)

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event-distributive ‘Three girls hold two balloons at separate locations/time intervals.’ > distribution is over locations/times

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(2) [Devojčice]key drže [po dva balona]share

girls hold po two balloon

(3) [Each girl]key holds [two balloons]share

  • Share is what is distributed
  • Key is distributed over
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(2) [Devojčice]key drže [po dva balona]share

girl hold po two balloon

 po attaches to the share (what is distributed)

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(3) [Each girl]key hold [two balloons]share

 each (determiner-like) attaches to the key (the NP over

which the distribution takes place)

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[Each girl] [holds two balloons]. [Devojčice] [drže po dva balona].

girls hold po two balloons

x [x is a girl] [(y) y is ‘2 balloons’  x holds y]

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(3) Each girl holds two balloons.

 Exhaustivity (goup of girls needs to be exhausted)  Atomicity

(the group of girls needs to be partitioned into

atoms)

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(3) Each girl holds two balloons.

 Context A: Mary and Jane hold 2

balloons together and Rose holds 2 balloons ✗

 Context B: Mary and Jane hold 2

balloons each while Rose is holding 2 kites ✗

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(2) Devojčice drže po dva balona.

girls hold po two balloon

 no exhaustivity requirement

(the group of girls needs not be exhausted)

 no atomicity requirement

(the group of girls needs not be partitioned in atoms)

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(2) Devojčice drže po dva balona

girls hold po two balloon

 Context A: Mary and Jane hold 2

balloons together and Rose holds 2 balloons ✓

 Context B: Mary and Jane hold 2

balloons each while Rose is holding 2 kites ✓

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Differences

 Spatial/temporal distribution  ‘Non-exhaustive’ context  ‘Non-atomic’ context  po ≠ each, UQ or DD (floated)

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 one way of salvaging the key-share

view: exhaustivity requirement is over events (the key is always an event - spatiotemporal argument)

 hard to disprove or test

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G1: No atomic partitioning requirement

 Participants in the described events do not

have to be atomically partitioned (they can also be partitioned into groups or not partitioned at all). G2: No exhaustivity requirement

 The group of participants in the event

needs not be exhausted (‘exhaustively distributed over’). This holds even in the case where the distribution is over atomic participants.

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 po is not a universal distributive quantifier  po attaches to what is distributed

(distshare)

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PO QUANTIFIES OVER EVENTS

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Claim

 po systematically involves distribution

  • ver spaces/times

 participant-distribution follows from

event-distribution

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(1) Tri devojčice drže po dva balona (2) Three girls each hold two balloons. ‘Each of the three girls holds two balloons.’

  • participant-distributive (exhaustive and

atomic)

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(1) Tri devojčice drže po dva balona (2) Three girls each hold two balloons. ‘Some (but not necessary all) girls holds two balloons in groups or individually.’

  • participant-distributive (not exhaustive

and not atomic)

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(1) Tri devojčice drže po dva balona. (2) Three girls each hold two balloons. ‘Three girls hold two balloons at separate locations or/and time intervals.’

  • event-distributive
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 po semantically combines first with a

numeral (n) and then with an NP and

 there must be at least two events that

involve an NP of the cardinality n (cumulation of events involving nNP, ex. po 2 balloons)

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[[po]] = n. Q<e,t>. P<e, t>. e. e  *nQ & e  nQ & x. Q(x) = 1 & P(x)(e) = 1

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Tri devojčice drže po dva balona three girls hold po two balloons

  • A plurality of events – constructed out of

single events involving 2 balloons

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hold-event agent theme e1 Mary b1+b2 e2 Jane b3+b4 e3 Rose b5+b6 *hold-event_ agent-sum theme-sum e1+e2 Mary+Jane b1+b2+b3+b4 e1+e2+e3 Mary+Jane+Rose b1+b2+ b3+b4 +b5+b6 …

  • at least two events involving 2 balloons
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hold-event agent theme e1 Mary+Jane+Rose b1+b2 e2 Mary+Jane+Rose b3+b4 e3 Mary+Jane+Rose b5+b6 *hold-event_ agent-sum theme-sum e1+e2+e3 Mary+Jane+Rose b1+b2+ b3+b4 +b5+b6 …

  • at least two events involving 2 balloons
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 po is not a universal distributive quantifier

like each, since it does not require atomic partitioning of the group of participants or exhaustive distribution over participants

 po quantifies over spatiotemporal units

(events)

 quantification over events derives so-called

quantification over participants

 the participants can but need not be

‘atomic’ or ‘exhausted’

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ACQUISITION

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Do children know that po yields:

 event-distributive readings (distribution

  • ver space/time)

 participant-distributive readings (events

involving atomic participants) and

 syntactically attaches to what is

distributed (distributive share, cf. Choe 1987)?

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(1) po-object sentences Tri devojčice drže po dva balona. three girls hold po two balloon ‘Three girls are (each) / separately holding two balloons.’ (2) po-subject sentences Po tri devojčice drže dva balona. po three girls hold two balloon ‘Three girls are holding each of two balloons.’ (3) double-po sentences Po tri devojčice drže po dva balona. po three girls hold po two balloon ‘Three girls are holding two balloons at separate locations.’

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Subject-distributive (SD) (1) Tri devojčice drže po dva balona. three girls hold po two balloons ‘Three girls are (each) / separately holding two balloons.’

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Object-distributive (OD) Po tri devojčice drže dva balona. po three girls hold two balloons ‘Three girls are holding each of two balloons.’

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Event-distributive (ED) (3) Po tri devojčice drže po dva balona. po three girls hold po two balloons ‘Three girls are holding two balloons at separate locations.’

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SD OD ED po-object

YES NO YES

po-subject

NO YES YES

double-po

NO NO YES

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 Children: N=19, between ages 6;8 and

7;6 (MA= 6.5, SD = 0.5,10 girls)

 Adults: N=17, f=12, MA= 35.5, sd=8.8

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 54 test items  18 distracters  block design (24 items) balanced across

subjects

 TVJT

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 H1: All po-sentences allow event-

distributive readings.

 H2: The position of po determines the

type of a participant-distributive reading

  • f the sentence (subject-distributive or
  • bject-distributive).
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10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 po-object po-subject double-po SD OD ED

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 The syntactic position of po determines

the participant-distributive reading of its sentence (supporting H2)

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 Object-distributive readings (OD) were

accepted significantly less than all other readings (unpredicted)

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the information structure hypothesis:

 Left-most peripheral positions are

suitable topics (Godjevac 2003)

 Nonspecific NPs are not suitable

candidates for topics

 po-phrases are nonspecific (Choe 1987)

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Well formed: (1)a. Tri devojčice drže po dva balona.

three girls hold po two balloons

  • b. [TopP [tri devojčice]1 [IP t1 drže po dva balona] ]
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Ill-formed (2) Po tri devojčice drže dva balona.

po three girls hold two balloons

 po-phrase is non-specific (unsuitable topic) and occupies the

left-most position (topic position)

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 Adults do not like po-initial sentences

and not OD contexts

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prediction:

[TopP [dva balona]1 [IP po tri devojčice drže t1] ] two balloons po three girls hold

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10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 po-object po-subject double-po SD OD ED

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G1:Children accept both participant- distributive and event-distributive readings G2:Children are not sensitive to the locus of po G3:Children do not like distributing subjects alone (without objects)

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 G1 and G2 – children do not know the

meaning of po

 G3: Children do not like distributing

subjects alone (without objects)

 Why?

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10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 po-object po-subject double-po Children Adults

20.2% vs. 47.1%, 2(1) = 16.4, p < 0.001

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 sentences with two numerals involve

scope relations between two nNPs

 the inverse scope construal (object-

distributive) is disprefered to surface scope (subject-distributive)

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But

 our analysis of distributivity in Serbian

does not rely on scope - the scope of two nNPs is not relevant for the resulting (participant) distributive reading

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 Could it be that scope is relevant for

children?

 NO

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 The truth-conditions of double-po

sentences are very problematic for scopal analysis, but follow from event quantification

 Children accept double-po sentences at

high rates

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(3) Po three girls hold po two balloons

  • true in the scenario: every day, three girls

together hold two balloons > follows from event quantification analysis but not from scopal analysis

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 thematic prominence of arguments,

may be more important for children than scope relations (Lee 2003, É. Kiss et al. 2012)

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Hierarchy of thematic roles in children (Lee 2003; cf. É. Kiss et al. 2012) ACTOR > LOCATION > PATIENT

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Children at age 6:

 know that po yields event-distributive

and participant-distributive readings;

 have no problems with double-po

sentences and ED reading Claim: po quantifies over events and participants-distribution should be reduced to event-distribution

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Acquisition:

 How to further experimentaly investigate

this claim

 Temporal distribution with po

Theory:

 Other instances of po

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 locative preposition (spatiotemporal

meaning) Attaches also to:

  • numerals ‘po tri’ (po three)
  • weak quantifiers ‘po mnogo’ (po many)
  • bare singular nouns ‘po brod’ (po boat)
  • verbs, adverbs, adjectives

 systematically introduces spatiotemporal

separation/grouping/distribution (among other meanings)

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THANK YOU! Thanks to Ana Bosnić for data collection