Incremental processing in a polysynthetic language (Murrinhpatha)

Laurence Bruggeman*, Evan Kidd, Rachel Nordlinger, Anne Cutler

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Language processing is rapidly incremental, but evidence bearing upon this assumption comes from very few languages. In this paper we report on a study of incremental processing in Murrinhpatha, a polysynthetic Australian language, which expresses complex sentence-level meanings in a single verb, the full meaning of which is not clear until the final morph. Forty native Murrinhpatha speakers participated in a visual world eyetracking experiment in which they viewed two complex scenes as they heard a verb describing one of the scenes. The scenes were selected so that the verb describing the target scene had either no overlap with a possible description of the competitor image, or overlapped from the start (onset overlap) or at the end of the verb (rhyme overlap). The results showed that, despite meaning only being clear at the end of the verb, Murrinhpatha speakers made incremental predictions that differed across conditions. The findings demonstrate that processing in polysynthetic languages is rapid and incremental, yet unlike in commonly studied languages like English, speakers make parsing predictions based on information associated with bound morphs rather than discrete words.
Original languageEnglish
Article number106075
Number of pages7
JournalCognition
Volume257
Early online date6 Feb 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2025

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