Shin-ae Yoon
(Konkuk University)
In this study, I reassure the neural
correlates in pragmatics inference processing during conversational implicature
using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI).
To
this end, the linguistic experiment was conducted; this experiment was modified
from the study where pragmatic inferential processing was required. The
condition comprises question and answer conversation pairs which are
differentiated in the degree of implicitness and the unrelated condition in
which semantic integration or association with world knowledge is not required.
Behavioral differences were influenced by the implicit degree in both
accuracy and reaction time. The results suggested that implicitness increased
the difficulty of discourse comprehension, and recruited further processing,
such as semantic and the world knowledge integration while the unrelated
condition showed relatively high accuracy and short reaction time, indicating
that there was no difficulty in doing the task. With respect to the
neuroimaging results, not only did this study confirm the brain cortical
regions involved in language processing established in earlier neurolinguistic
research, but also identified subcortical region, caudate activation. These
results suggest that subcortical region such as caudate as well as the cortical
regions are actively involved in the linguistic processing. I will introduce
the basic principles of functional magnetic resonance imaging(fMRI), its uses
in linguistic research and the experimental design and method with the results
in this study.
The Interface of Syntax, Semantics, and
Pragmatics
in the Use of Medially Positioned Conjuncts
in English
Wonseok Kim
(Yonsei University)
Since the 1970s,
discourse markers have drawn a lot of attention from scholars working in the
fields such as pragmatics, discourse analysis, language acquisition, and
language pedagogy. This has resulted in a rapidly expanding body of research.
However, there have been relatively few studies about the medial placement of
discourse markers, especially a particular subtype known as conjuncts. Most
previous studies simply stated the obvious fact that these discourse markers or
conjuncts occur initially, medially, or finally in a sentence. The purpose of
this research, in contrast, is to explain the medial placement of these
conjuncts in detail. In order to provide a comprehensive explanation for their
medial placement, this study used the British National Corpus (BNC). Since the
targeted discourse marker subtype exists in large numbers, only 10 items were
selected for the purposes of a qualitative and quantitative research. As a
result of this analysis, this research suggests the following multi-dimensional
explanation for the medial placement of the conjuncts: the constraints placed
on actual discourse marker presence; the minimal argument; the free shifting
condition; optimal approximation; information partitioning and focus; syntactic
form; semantic typology; medial placement constraint; and style. These various
factors operate in parallel in order to position the conjuncts in a suitable
medial position in a sentence, revealing the interface of syntax, semantics,
and pragmatics.
An Empirical Study of Internally Headed Relative Clauses in Korean
Sanghoun Song
(Korea University)
This study concerns a linguistic phenomenon for which theories are ample
and pretty old but data are scant and relatively new; namely, Internally Headed
Relative Clauses in Korean. IHRCs have been one of the hot issues since the
early days of Korean generative grammar, but an empirical base for establishing
the theoretic foundations remains unsettled. The erstwhile studies have yet not
formed a consensus even as to whether Korean indeed employs IHRCs. The other
major issues include whether and how IHRCs in Korean (if exist) differ from
Externally Headed Relative Clauses and which grammatical factors constrain the
construction. When the basic puzzles have been left unresolved in theory for
quite a while as such, using a data-based method is particular rewarding in
language research. Thus, the present study aims to provide an empirical bottom line
for a livelier discussion about IHRCs in Korean. To this end, the present study
explores a spoken corpus and conducts acceptability judgment testing followed
by a survey and interview with the participants. This methodological pipeline
leads us to verify that there exists an individual variation across speakers in
acceptability judgments and interpretation of IHRCs in Korean. The conditions
for IHRCs in Korean include distinction between individual-level and
stage-level, grammatical and lexical aspects of the predicates in the relative
and main clauses, animacy of the relativized head, and indexation of kes in IHRCs. Accordingly, we classified
the IHRCs in Korean into the five subtypes, three of which are genuine types
and the others are pseudo types. In addition, via the survey and interview it
is revealed that IHRCs and EHRCs in Korean differ in implications; the former
involves immediacy, simultaneity, adjacency, specificity, and particularly
relevancy whereas the latter conveys a neutral meaning.