Wh-dependencies in English and Japanese: a
test case for experimental syntax
Jon Sprouse
Department of Cognitive Sciences
University of California, Irvine
While there
is a general intuition in the field that formal acceptability judgment
experiments (a.k.a. experimental syntax) may be helpful for syntactic
theorizing, it is not yet clear what role these experiments will actually play
in the development of syntactic theories. The obvious answer is that these
experiments should yield new data for syntactic theories; however, informal
acceptability judgments have proven to be overwhelmingly correct, and extremely
sensitive (Featherston 2008, Myers 2008), such that Ònew dataÓ are few and far
between. In this talk, I would like to pursue the idea that one possible
benefit of experimental syntax is that it allows us to probe the inherent
source-ambiguity of acceptability judgments: judgment ÒpenaltiesÓ can be caused
by either a violation of a grammatical constraint or the cost of a parsing
process. IÕd like to suggest that this source-ambiguity might give us the Ònew
dataÓ that we would like. By asking whether the acceptability penalty could
have a processing-cost source, we can begin to figure out whether the
similarities/differences that we find between constructions are due to the
grammatical operations and constraints necessary to evaluate the
representation, or whether they are due to the parsing processes necessary to
build the representation in real time.
As
a case study, I will present a
series of acceptability judgment experiments designed to investigate to what
extent wh-dependencies in English and Japanese (wh-displacement, multiple
wh-questions, wh-in-situ) may be formed by the same grammatical operations. We
find that wh-displacement and multiple wh-questions in English are sensitive to
the length of the dependency, while wh-in-situ in Japanese is not. Furthermore,
we find that multiple wh-questions in English are sensitive to a subset of the
island effects that wh-displacement is sensitive to, while wh-in-situ is
sensitive to none. These effects suggest that English wh-displacement and
multiple-wh dependencies form a natural class to the exclusion of Japanese
wh-in-situ dependencies. To account for these effects, we first propose a
mapping between dependency type and grammatical operations; however, this
mapping leaves some of the results unexplained. We then propose a second
mapping from grammatical operations to parsing processes (and their associated
costs) that includes a backward licensor search process for multiple-wh
dependencies similar to the forward search for a gap location in overt
wh-movement dependencies (the active filler strategy). Overall, our results
suggest that formal acceptability judgment experiments can not only further
syntactic theories, but may also facilitate a closer interaction between
offline grammatical theories and online processing theories.