Of beavers and tables: the role of animacy in the processing of grammatical gender within a picture-word interference task
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Frontiers Media
Abstract
Grammatical gender processing during language production has classically been studied
using the so-called picture-word interference (PWI) task. In this procedure, participants
are presented with pictures they must name using target nouns while ignoring
superimposed written distractor nouns. Variations in response times are expected
depending on the congruency between the gender values of targets and distractors.
However, there have been disparate results in terms of the mandatory character of
an agreement context to observe competitive gender effects and the interpretation of
the direction of these effects in Romance languages, this probably due to uncontrolled
variables such as animacy. In the present study, we conducted two PWI experiments with
European Portuguese speakers who were asked to produce bare nouns. The percentage
of animate targets within the list was manipulated: 0, 25, 50, and 100%. A gender
congruency effect was found restricted to the 0% list (all targets were inanimate). Results
support the selection of gender in transparent languages in the absence of an agreement
context, as predicted by the Gender Acquisition and Processing (GAP) hypothesis
(Sá-Leite et al., 2019), and are interpreted through the attentional mechanisms involved
in the PWI paradigm, in which the processing of animate targets would be favored to the
detriment of distractors due to biological relevance and semantic prioritization
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Bibliographic citation
Sá-Leite AR, Haro J, Comesaña M and Fraga I (2021) Of Beavers and Tables: The Role of Animacy in the Processing of Grammatical Gender Within a Picture-Word Interference Task. Front. Psychol. 12:661175
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https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.661175Sponsors
This work was supported by the Government of Spain, Ministry of Education and Vocational Training through the Training program for Academic Staff (FPU [BOE-B-2017-2646]), the Spanish Ministry of Economic Affairs and Digital Transformation with the research project PID2019-110583GB-I00, the Galician Government (grant for research groups ED431B 2019/2020), and by the FCT and FEDER through COMPETE2020 under the PT2020 Partnership Agreement POCI-01-0145-FEDER-007653
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© 2021 Sá-Leite, Haro, Comesaña and Fraga. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode)








