Four experiments showed structural priming with ditransitive structures.
•Repetition of a matrix verb did not cause a lexical boost.
•A lexical boost does not occur with verbs that do not head of the primed structure.
AbstractFour structural priming experiments investigated whether the lexical boost is due to the repeated head verb of the primed structure or due to the repetition of any verb, testing structural priming of ditransitive structures (The hotel owner decided to loan the tourist a tent/a tent to the tourist). In Experiments 1–3, we manipulated the repetition of the matrix verb (decided) that is not the syntactic head in the primed structure. The results showed abstract structural priming of the embedded ditransitive structure but the repetition of the matrix verb did not boost the priming. In addition to manipulating the repetition of the matrix verb, we also manipulated the head verb of the primed structure (loan) in Experiment 4. It showed a lexical boost with the repetition of the head verb but no boost with the repetition of the matrix verb. These results are consistent with the residual activation model, which only predicts a boost from the verb that is the head of the primed structure. They do not support models which predict that the repetition of any lexical material in a sentence boosts priming.
KeywordsLanguage production
Structural priming
Lexical boost
Syntactic head
Data availabilityThe experimental data and R analysis files can be downloaded via the Open Science Framework at http://dx.doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/P8F2C.
© 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc.
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