Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-zzh7m Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T07:43:01.269Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Genre effects on subject expression in Spanish: Priming in narrative and conversation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 April 2007

Catherine E. Travis
Affiliation:
University of New Mexico, Albuquerque

Abstract

Structural priming refers to the process whereby the use of a syntactic structure in an utterance functions as a prime on a subsequent utterance, such that that same structure is repeated. This article investigates this phenomenon from the perspective of first-person singular subject expression in Spanish. Two dialects and two genres of spoken Spanish are studied: New Mexican narratives and Colombian Spanish conversation. An analysis of 2,000 verbs occurring with first-person singular subjects reveals that subject expression undergoes a priming effect in both data sets, but that the effect is more short-lived in the Colombian data. This is found to be attributable to the interactional nature of these data, showing that the need to deal with interactional concerns weakens the priming effect. As the first study to compare priming of subject expression across distinct genres, this article makes an important contribution to our understanding of this effect, and in particular, of factors that play a role in its maintenance or dissipation in discourse.I would like to thank Rena Torres Cacoullos for her many invaluable comments on this article and Jill Morford and Benedikt Szmrecsanyi for helpful discussion on the notion of priming. I also gratefully acknowledge Jessi Aaron and Matt Alba for help with the coding and analysis; Neddy Vigil and Garland Bills for making the New Mexican data available to me; Ana Aurora Medina Murillo for help with the transcription of the NM data; and María Elena Rendón, Marianne Dieck, and Rocío Amézquita for the collection and transcription of the Colombian data.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2007 Cambridge University Press

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Ashby, William J., & Bentivoglio, Paola. (1993). Preferred argument structure in spoken French and Spanish. Language Variation and Change 5:6176.Google Scholar
Ávila-Shah, Bárbara I. (2000). Discourse connectedness in Caribbean Spanish. In A. Roca (ed.), Research on Spanish in the United States. Somerville, MA: Cascadilla Press. 238251.
Bayley, Robert. (2002). The quantitative paradigm. In J. K. Chambers, P. Trudgill, & N. Schilling-Estes (eds.), The handbook of language variation and change. Oxford: Blackwell. 117141.
Bayley, Robert, & Pease-Alvarez, Lucinda. (1997). Null pronoun variation in Mexican-descent children's narrative discourse. Language Variation and Change 9:349371.Google Scholar
Bentivoglio, Paola. (1987). Los sujetos pronominales de primera persona en el habla de Caracas. Caracas: Universidad Central de Venezuela.
Biber, Douglas. (1986). Spoken and written textual dimensions in English: Resolving the contradictory findings. Language 62:384416.Google Scholar
Biber, Douglas. (1988). Variation across speech and writing. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Biber, Douglas. (1992). Using computer-based text corpora to analyze the referential strategies of spoken and written texts. In J. Svartvik (ed.), Directions in corpus linguistics: Proceedings of Nobel Symposium 82, Stockholm 1991. Berlin / New York: Mouton de Gruyter. 214252.
Biber, Douglas. (2001). Using corpus-based methods to investigate grammar and use: Some case studies on the use of verbs in English. In R. C. Simpson & J. M. Swales (eds.), Corpus linguistics in North America. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. 101115.
Bills, Garland D. (1997). New Mexican Spanish: Demise of the earliest European variety in the United States. American Speech 72:154171.Google Scholar
Bills, Garland D., & Vigil, Neddy A. (1999). Ashes to ashes: The historical basis for dialect variation in New Mexican Spanish. Romance Philology 53:4366.Google Scholar
Bills, Garland D., & Vigil, Neddy A. (2000). The continuity of change: Nahuatlismos in New Mexican Spanish. In A. Roca (ed.), Research on Spanish in the United States: Linguistic issues and challenges. Somerville, MA: Cascadilla Press. 137153.
Bock, J. Kathryn. (1986). Syntactic persistence in language production. Cognitive Psychology 18:355387.Google Scholar
Bock, J. Kathryn, & Griffin, Zenzi M. (2000). The persistence of structural priming: Transient activation or implicit learning. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General 129:177192.Google Scholar
Boyland, Joyce Tang, & Anderson, John R. (1998). Evidence that syntactic priming is long-lasting. Proceedings of the Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society 20:1205.
Branigan, Holly P., Pickering, Martin J., & Cleland, Alexandra A. (2000a). Syntactic co-ordination in dialogue. Cognition 75:B1325.Google Scholar
Branigan, Holly P., Pickering, Martin J., Liversedge, Simon P., Stewart, Andrew J., & Urbach, Thomas P. (1995). Syntactic priming: Investigating the mental representation of language. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research 24:489506.Google Scholar
Branigan, Holly P., Pickering, Martin J., Stewart, Andrew J., & McLean, Janet F. (2000b). Syntactic priming in spoken production: Linguistic and temporal interference. Memory and Cognition 28:12971302.Google Scholar
Bybee, Joan, Perkins, Revere, & Pagliuca, William. (1994). The evolution of grammar: Tense, aspect and modality in the languages of the world. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Cameron, Richard. (1992). Pronominal and null subject variation in Spanish: Constraints, dialects, and functional compensation. Doctoral dissertation, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.
Cameron, Richard. (1993). Ambiguous agreement, functional compensation, and nonspecific in the Spanish of San Juan, Puerto Rico, and Madrid, Spain. Language Variation and Change 5:305334.Google Scholar
Cameron, Richard. (1994). Switch reference, verb class and priming in a variable syntax. Papers from the Regional Meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society: Parasession on variation in linguistic theory 30:2745.Google Scholar
Cameron, Richard. (1995). The scope and limits of switch reference as a constraint on pronominal subject expression. Hispanic Linguistics 6–7:127.Google Scholar
Cameron, Richard, & Flores-Ferrán, Nydia. (2003). Perseveration of subject expression across regional dialects of Spanish. Spanish in Context 1:4165.Google Scholar
Chafe, Wallace. (1994). Discourse, consciousness and time: The flow and displacement of conscious experience in speaking and writing. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Chang, Franklin, Dell, Gary S., Bock, J. Kathryn, & Griffin, Zenzi M. (2000). Structural priming as implicit learning: A comparison of models of sentence production. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research 29:217229.Google Scholar
Company Company, Concepción. (2006). Subjectification of verbs into discourse markers: Semantic-pragmatic change only? In B. Cornillie & N. Delbecque (eds.), Topics in subjectification and modalization. Amsterdam: Benjamins. 97121.
Davidson, Brad. (1996). ‘Pragmatic weight’ and Spanish subject pronouns: The pragmatic and discourse uses of and yo in spoken Madrid Spanish. Journal of Pragmatics 26:543565.Google Scholar
Du Bois, John W., Schuetze-Coburn, Stephan, Cumming, Susanna, & Paolino, Danae. (1993). Outline of discourse transcription. In J. Edwards & M. Lampert (eds.), Talking data: Transcription and coding in discourse. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum. 4589.
Enríquez, Emilia V. (1984). El pronombre personal sujeto en la lengua española hablada en Madrid. Madrid: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Instituto Miguel de Cervantes.
Estival, Dominique. (1985). Syntactic priming of the passive in English. Text 5:721.Google Scholar
Flores-Ferrán, Nydia. (2002). Subject personal pronouns in Spanish narratives of Puerto Ricans in New York City: A sociolinguistic perspective. Munich: Lincom Europa.
Flores-Ferrán, Nydia. (2004). Spanish subject personal pronoun use in New York City Puerto Ricans: Can we rest the case of English contact? Language Variation and Change 16:4973.Google Scholar
Gries, Stefan Th. (2005). Syntactic priming: A corpus-based approach. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research 34:365399.Google Scholar
Gries, Stefan Th. (to appear). New perspectives on old alternations. In J. E. Cihlar, A. L. Franklin, D. W. Kaiser, & I. Kimbara (eds.), Papers from the 39th Regional Meeting of the Chicago Linguistics Society, Vol. 2. Chicago IL: Chicago Linguistic Society.
Hartsuiker, Robert J., Pickering, Martin J., & Veltkamp, Eline. (2004). Is syntax separate or shared between languages. Psychological Science 15:409414.Google Scholar
Hochberg, Judith G. (1986). Functional compensation for /s/ deletion in Puerto Rican Spanish. Language 62:609621.Google Scholar
Hopper, Paul J. (1987). Emergent grammar. Proceedings of the Berkeley Linguistics Society 13:139157.Google Scholar
Hopper, Paul J. (1998). Emergent grammar. In M. Tomasello (ed.), The new psychology of language, vol. 2: Cognitive and functional approaches to language structure. Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum. 155175.
Jia, Li, & Bayley, Robert. (2002). Null pronoun variation in Mandarin Chinese. University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics 8(3):103116.Google Scholar
Joordens, Steve, & Besner, Derek. (1992). Priming effects that span an intervening unrelated word: Implications for models of memory representation and retrieval. Journal of Experimental Psychology 18(3):483491.Google Scholar
Lipski, John M. (1994). Latin American Spanish. London: Longman.
Loebell, Helga, & Bock, Kathryn. (2003). Structural priming across languages. Linguistics 41(5):791824.Google Scholar
Meyer, David E., & Schvaneveldt, Roger W. (1971). Facilitation in recognizing pairs of words: Evidence of a dependence between retrieval operations. Journal of Experimental Psychology 90(2):227234.Google Scholar
Meyer, David E., Schvaneveldt, Roger W., & Ruddy, Margaret G. (1972). Activation of lexical memory. Paper presented at the 13th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society, St. Louis, MO.
Morales, Amparo. (1986). Algunos aspectos de gramática en contacto: La expresión del sujeto en el español de Puerto Rico. Anuario de Letras 24:7185.Google Scholar
Ono, Tsuyoshi, & Thompson, Sandra A. (1995). What can conversation tell us about syntax? In P. W. Davis (ed.), Alternative linguistics: Descriptive and theoretical modes. Amsterdam: Benjamins. 213271.
Otheguy, Ricardo, & Zentella, Ana Cecilia. (in press). Apuntes preliminares sobre el contacto lingüístico y dialectal en el uso pronominal del español en Nueva York: Variación, cambio e identidad en el uso variable del pronombre en seis comunidades hispanohablantes de la Gran Manzana. In R. Cameron & K. Potowski (eds.), Spanish in contact: Policy, social and linguistic inquiries. Amsterdam / Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 239257.
Otheguy, Ricardo, Zentella, Ana Cecilia, Erker, Daniel, & Livert, David. (2005). Factores gramaticales y sociodemográficos en la evolución y continuidad de los pronombres sujetos del español de los latinoamericanos en Nueva York. Paper presented at the XIV Congreso de la Asociación de Lingüística y Filología de América Látina (ALFAL), Monterrey, México.
Paredes Silva, Vera Lucia. (1993). Subject omission and functional compensation: Evidence from written Brazilian Portuguese. Language Variation and Change 5:3549.Google Scholar
Pickering, Martin J., & Branigan, Holly P. (1998). The representation of verbs: Evidence from syntactic priming in language production. Journal of Memory and Language 39:633651.Google Scholar
Pickering, Martin J., & Branigan, Holly P. (1999). Syntactic priming in language production. Trends in Cognitive Sciences 3:136141.Google Scholar
Pickering, Martin J., Branigan, Holly P., Cleland, Alexandra A., & Stewart, Andrew J. (2000). Activation of syntactic information during language production. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research 29:205216.Google Scholar
Poplack, Shana. (1980). The notion of the plural in Puerto Rican Spanish: Competing constraints on (s) deletion. In W. Labov (ed.), Locating language in time and space. New York: Academic Press. 5567.
Poplack, Shana, & Tagliamonte, Sali. (2001). African American English in the diaspora. Malden, MA: Blackwell.
Rand, David, & Sankoff, David. (1990). GoldVarb: A variable rule application for the Macintosh (2.0 ed.). Montreal: Centre de recherche mathématiques, Université de Montréal.
Ranson, Diana L. (1991). Person marking in the wake of /s/ deletion in Andalusian Spanish. Language Variation and Change 3:133152.Google Scholar
Saffran, Eleanor M., & Martin, Nadine. (1997). Effects of structural priming on sentence production in aphasics. Language and Cognitive Processes 12:877882.Google Scholar
Scheibman, Joanne. (2001). Local patterns of subjectivity in person and verb type in American English conversation. In J. Bybee & P. J. Hopper (eds.), Frequency and the emergence of linguistic structure. Amsterdam: Benjamins. 6189.
Scherre, Maria Marta Pereira. (2001). Phrase level parallelism effect on Noun Phrase number agreement. Language Variation and Change 13:91107.Google Scholar
Scherre, Maria Marta Pereira, & Naro, Anthony J. (1991). Marking in discourse: ‘Birds of a feather’. Language Variation and Change 3:2332.Google Scholar
Scherre, Maria Marta Pereira, & Naro, Anthony J. (1992). The serial effect on internal and external variables. Language Variation and Change 4:113.Google Scholar
Silva-Corvalán, Carmen. (1982). Subject expression and placement in Mexican-American Spanish. In J. Amastae & L. Elías Olivares (eds.), Spanish in the United States: Sociolinguistic aspects. New York: Cambridge University Press. 93120.
Silva-Corvalán, Carmen. (1994). Language contact and change: Spanish in Los Angeles. Oxford: Clarendon.
Silva-Corvalán, Carmen. (1997). Variación sintáctica en el discurso oral: Problemas metodológicos. In F. Moreno Fernández (ed.), Trabajos de sociolingüística hispánica. Alcalá de Henares, España: Universidad de Alcalá. 115135.
Silva-Corvalán, Carmen. (2001). Sociolingüística y pragmática del español. Washington DC: Georgetown University Press.
Solomon, Julie. (1999). Phonological and syntactic variation in the Spanish of Valladolid, Yucatán. Doctoral dissertation, Stanford University, Stanford, CA.
Szmrecsanyi, Benedikt. (2005). Language users as creatures of habit: A corpus-based analysis of persistence in spoken English. Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory 1:113149.Google Scholar
Szmrecsanyi, Benedikt. (2006). Morphosyntactic persistence in spoken English: A corpus study at the intersection of variationist sociolinguistics. Berlin/New York: Mouton de Gruyter.
Tannen, Deborah. (1987). Repetition in conversation: Toward a poetics of talk. Language 63(3):574605.Google Scholar
Thompson, Sandra A. (2002). ‘Object Complements’ and conversation: Towards a realistic account. Studies in Language 26:125163.Google Scholar
Toribio, Almeida Jacqueline. (1996). Dialectal variation in the licensing of null referential and expletive subjects. In C. Parodi, C. Quicoli, M. Saltarelli, & M. L. Zubizarreta (eds.), Aspects of Romance linguistics: Selected papers from the 24th Linguistic Symposium on Romance Languages, 1994. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press. 409432.
Travis, Catherine E. (2005a). Discourse markers in Colombian Spanish: A study in polysemy. Berlin/New York: Mouton de Gruyter.
Travis, Catherine E. (2005b). The yo-yo effect: Priming in subject expression in Colombian Spanish. In R. Gess & E. J. Rubin (eds.), Selected papers from the 34th Linguistic Symposium on Romance Languages (LSRL), Salt Lake City, 2004. Amsterdam: Benjamins. 329349.
Travis, Catherine E. (2006). Subjetivización de construcciones: Los verbos ‘cognitivos’ en el español conversacional. In Rosa María Ortiz Ciscomani (ed.), Serie Memorias del VIII Encuentro Internacional de Lingüística en el Noroeste, vol. 2. Hermosillo, Sonora, Mexico: UniSon. 85109.
Vigil, Neddy A., & Bills, Garland D. (1997). A methodology for rapid geographical mapping of dialect features. In A. R. Thomas (ed.), Issues and methods in dialectology. Bangor: University of Wales. 247255.
Vigil, Neddy A., & Bills, Garland D. (2000). El español de Nuevo México: hablamos mexicano. Encuentro Internacional de Lingüística en el Noroeste 5:197217.Google Scholar
Vigil, Neddy A., & Bills, Garland D. (2004). Dialect shift in New Mexican Spanish: A turkey by any other name. Romance Philology 57:323343.Google Scholar
Weiner, E. Judith, & Labov, William. (1983). Constraints on the agentless passive. Journal of Linguistics 19:2958.Google Scholar