This study investigates factors that influence the interpretation of ambiguous sentences containing the word only. When only appears preverbally in simple SVO constructions, it can be interpreted as associating with the direct object, the verb, or the entire verb phrase. An auditory sentence completion task was used to probe native-speaking English listeners for overall biases in the interpretation of only, as well as the influence of accentuation and individual differences on the extent of any such biases. Results show a strong preference for only to associate with the direct object overall, although this preference is reduced when the direct object is less (relatively) prominent. Finally, the effect of accentuation was itself modulated by individual differences related to cognitive processing style.
DOI: 10.21437/SpeechProsody.2016-40
Hurley, R., Bishop, J. (2016) Prosodic and individual influences on the interpretation of "only". Proc. Speech Prosody 2016, 193-197.
@inproceedings{Hurley+2016, author={Rose Hurley and Jason Bishop}, title={Prosodic and individual influences on the interpretation of "only"}, year=2016, booktitle={Speech Prosody 2016}, doi={10.21437/SpeechProsody.2016-40}, url={http://dx.doi.org/10.21437/SpeechProsody.2016-40}, pages={193--197} }