In:English Noun Phrases from a Functional-Cognitive Perspective: Current issues
Edited by Lotte Sommerer and Evelien Keizer
[Studies in Language Companion Series 221] 2022
► pp. 107–134
Post-head compression in noun phrase referring expressions
Structural change in interactive communication
Published online: 21 January 2022
https://doi.org/10.1075/slcs.221.03opp
https://doi.org/10.1075/slcs.221.03opp
Abstract
In communication, language users frequently produce referring expressions with noun phrases at their centre (NP REs). Over the course of a communicative interaction, interlocutors’ use of NP REs tends to change: previous research has attested to speakers’ tendency to converge on linguistic forms – establishing routines (e.g. Pickering & Garrod 2004, 2005) – and to shorten their NP REs in the process (e.g. Clark & Wilkes-Gibbs 1986; Brennan & Clark 1996; Castillo et al. 2019). The present chapter investigates this shortening process and observes the structural changes in NP REs that accompany it. The study is based on data from an experimentally elicited corpus of spoken English consisting of conversational dyads producing repeated references to visual stimuli in a referential communication task. Interlocutors are indeed shown to shorten their NP REs over the course of the elicited dialogues: particularly, a decrease in longer clausal post-head elements is observed, while the use of only premodified NP REs and shorter phrasal postmodification shows a relative increase. These changes are indicative of shifts in the type of structural modification the NP REs contain: initially, speakers produce more clausal elements, which are associated with structural elaboration; later in the interaction, a decrease in clausal and relative increase in phrasal modification reveals structural compression (cf. Biber & Clark 2002).
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Change-in-interaction in the use of NP REs
- 2.1Convergence and the IAM
- 2.2Processes of shortening
- 2.3Structural changes in the shortening of NP REs
- 2.4Functions of the forms of NP REs: Audience design and efficiency
- 3.Studying NP REs in interaction: An experimentally elicited corpus of spoken English dialogue
- 3.1Experimental set-up
- Participants
- Materials
- Procedure
- 3.2Data processing and coding
- 3.1Experimental set-up
- 4.Results and analysis
- 4.1Length of NP REs and pre- and post-head elements
- 4.2Structural changes in post-head elements
- 5.Discussion: Compression in NP REs as change-in-interaction
- 6.Conclusion
Notes References Appendix
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