Effects of subject-case marking on agreement processing: ERP evidence from Basque
Date
2018Author
Chow, Wing-Yee
Nevins, Andrew
Carreiras, Manuel
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Wing-Yee Chow, Andrew Nevins, Manuel Carreiras, Effects of subject-case marking on agreement processing: ERP evidence from Basque, Cortex, Volume 99, 2018, Pages 319-329, ISSN 0010-9452, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cortex.2017.12.009.
Abstract
Previous cross-linguistic research has found that comprehenders are immediately sensitive
to various kinds of agreement violations across languages. We focused on Basque, a
verb-final ergative language with both subjecteverb (SeV) and objecteverb (OeV) agreement.
We compared the effects of SeV agreement violations on comprehenders' eventrelated
brain potentials (ERPs) in transitive sentences (where OeV agreement is present,
and the subject is ergative) and intransitive sentences (where OeV agreement is absent,
and the subject is absolutive). We observed a P600 effect in both cases, but only violations
with intransitive subjects elicited an early posterior negativity. Such a qualitative difference
suggests that distinct neurocognitive mechanisms are involved in processing agreement
with transitive subjects (which are marked with ergative case) versus intransitive
subjects (which bear absolutive case). Building on theoretical proposals that in languages
such as Basque, true agreement occurs with absolutive subjects but not with ergative
subjects, we submit that the early posterior negativity may be an electrophysiological
signature for true agreement.