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Clitic pronouns and past participle agreement in ItalianinthreehearingimpairedbilingualsItalian/LIS
FrancescaVolpato
The aimof this study is to assess the comprehension and to elicit theproductionofcliticpronounsinsentenceswithleft-dislocation,inthreeadulthearing impaired bilinguals Italian/LIS and in four hearing speakers ofItalian.TheoccurrenceofcliticpronounsandthepresenceofpastparticipleagreementinItalianareinvestigatedthroughsentencecompletionandgram-maticalityjudgementtasks.Resultssuggestthat,inspiteoflateexposuretothe oral language due to hearing impairment, the linguistic competence ofthehearingimpairedindividualsisquiteintactandthesyntacticinformationiscorrectlyprojectedinthesyntactictree.Becauseofaveryselectiveimpair-mentinthemorphologyofcliticpronouns,onlyaqualitativeanalysisoftheerrors is possible. The non-standard forms are discussed within the frame-workoftherecentresearchonϕ-featuresfromasyntactic,morpho-phonologi-calandpsycholinguisticpointofview.Thestatisticallysignificantbetterper-formanceonpluralcliticpronounsasopposedtosingularonesconfirmsthefindingsofpreviousstudiesongenderandnumberfeaturesandprovesonceagainthatnumberinformationisretrievedearlierthangenderinformation*.
1. Introduction
This paper investigates the linguistic competence in Italianof three adult hearing impaired bilinguals (Italian/Italian SignLanguage-LIS) through sentence completion and grammaticalityjudgementtasks,assessingthecomprehensionandelicitingthepro-duction of third person accusative clitic pronouns in sentences withleftdislocation.
Thiswork originateswithin the frameworkof generativegram-mar from much existing literature on language acquisition, both inItalianandother languages, andon the implications thatadelayedaccesstotheinputduetohearingimpairmentmaycausetothisproc-ess. The analysis of responses shows that the performance on cliticpronounsvariesaccordingtothepresenceofsimpleorcompoundtens-es,inwhichpastparticipleagreementisalsorequired,andaccordingtothedifferentcombinationofgenderandnumberfeatures(confirm-ingtheconclusiondrawnbyDeVincenzi&DiDomenico1999).
Rivista di Linguistica20.2(2008),pp.309-345 (ricevuto nel luglio 2008)
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Thepaperisorganizedasfollows.Sections2and3presentsomedata on the acquisition of clitic pronouns in individuals showingtypicalandatypicallanguagedevelopmentindifferentRomancelan-guagesanddemonstratethatobjectcliticsaresometimesproblematicandacquiredwithsomedelaywhencomparedwithsubjectcliticsordeterminers. Section 4 outlines the linguistic background account-ingfortheoccurrenceofthird-personobjectcliticsandforagreementphenomenaderivingfromtheirpresenceinleft-dislocationsentences.Section5focusesontheexperiment,presentingthesubjectsinvolved,the materials used and the results achieved in the different tasks,also showing a classification of the type of errors made by the par-ticipants. Section 6 discusses the collected data within the currentresearchongenderandnumberfeatures.
2. Typical and atypical language acquisition
First language acquisition is a fast and seemingly effortlessprocess.Everychildisbornequippedwithalanguagefaculty,whichrequires being stimulated very early in one’s life in order to allowhim/hertoattaintheknowledgeofhis/herownlanguage.Ifthisfac-ultyisstimulatedtoolate,languageacquisitionisdelayed,leadingtosevereconsequencesforthedevelopmentoflinguisticabilities.
Deafnessisasensoryimpairmentwhichleavesthelanguagefac-ulty intact,butwhichseriously limitstheperson’sabilitytoacquireanoral languagenaturally.Hearingimpairedpeoplecannotdevelopanorallanguageaseasilyastheirhearingpeersbecausetheydonothavedirectaccesstothelinguisticinput.
Many variables might influence the language development inhearingimpairedpeople.Inanycasethehearingimpairmententailsadelayedacquisitionandconsequentlyadifficulty in thedomainofgrammaticalmorphologyandintheuseofsomefunctionalelements,suchasdeterminers,auxiliaries,prepositionsandpronouns(Volterra& Bates 1989, De Villiers J.G etal. 1994, Fabbretti etal. 1998,Franchi 1998, Tuller 2000, Ajello etal. 2001, Volterra etal. 2001,Tuller & Jakubowicz 2004, Fabbretti 2006, Fabbretti etal. 2006,Delage & Tuller 2007). These alone have no intrinsic meaning, buttheirpresenceisfundamentalinderivingthemeaningofasentence.
However,itisquitepossibleforhearingimpairedsubjectstofacethisarduoustask,aswasthecaseinastudyconductedontwoorally-trained hearing impaired adults (Volpato 2002). This study investi-gated the production and comprehension of clitic pronouns in left-
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dislocation sentences and showed that the linguistic impairment ofthesesubjectsisverylimitedandtheircompetenceinItalianisquiteintact.Thehearingdeficit,whichhindered themfromacquiring theItalianlanguagenaturally,hasnotinfluencedtheirlearningprocess,and it is certain that the longperiod of rehabilitation they enduredhasallowedthemtogainagoodknowledgeofItalian.
Thesameconsiderationsarevalidforthethreehearing-impairedbilinguals Italian/LISstudied in thispaper. I showthat these threeindividualshave indeedattainedaverygood competence in Italian,withaveryselectiveimpairmentinthemorphologyofcliticpronounswhichissignificantforthetheoryofϕ-features.
3. The development of clitic pronouns across different acquisition modes
Themorpho-syntacticimpairmentintheuseofcliticpronounsisnotasurprisingphenomenon.Indeed,itiswell-knownfromliteraturethattheseelementsarecomplexforhearingimpairedpeople,fortypi-cally-developing individuals and for other categories of individualsshowingatypicallanguagedevelopment.
Chesi (2000) & (2006) investigated the production of hearing-impairedItalianchildrenandfoundthattheyomittedagreatdealoffunctionalelements(articles,clitics,prepositions,auxiliaries).1WhatChesi noticed in his study was a widely attested tendency to avoidaccusative clitic pronouns, by adopting a strategy that involved thesubstitutionofthecliticpronounwithaDP(1a)ortheomissionalto-getherofthecliticandofthedirectobjectcomplement(1b):
(1) a.Poiiltoposcappaearrivailgattoperacchiappareiltopo… ‘thenthemouserunsawayandarrivesthecattocatchthemouse…’ TargeT:Poiiltoposcappaearrivailgattoperacchiapparlo. thenthemouserunsawayandarrivesthecattocatch-it:Cl
‘thenthemouserunsawayandthecatarrivestocatchit’ b.…lapadrona(ø)haaperto(ø),hapresoilgatto. …‘themistresshasopenedø,hascaughtthecat’ TargeT:…‘lapadrona(lo) haaperto(ilfrigorifero)ehapresoilgatto.’ …themistress(it:Cl)hasopened(thefridge)andhascaughtthecat ‘…themistressopenedit/thefridgeandcaughtthecat.’
Thesedifficultiesare,however,notpeculiartohearingimpairedpeople.Theproductionofaccusativecliticshasalsobeeninvestigatedin typical first and second language acquisition (Pirvulescu 2006,
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Hamann & Belletti 2006, Wexler etal. 2002) as well as in atypicallanguage development, such as SLI children (Leonard etal. 1992,Bortolini etal. 2006, Jakubowicz etal. 1998), across different lan-guages(Italian,French,SpanishandCatalan).Incomparingtheuseofdeterminers,andnominativeandobjectcliticsbyalltheseindivid-uals, thesestudiesrevealedthat,whiledeterminersandnominativeclitics are accurately produced, object clitics are more problematicand are mostly avoided, resulting again in ungrammatical omissionorinfelicitousrepetitionofafulllexicalDP.
For Spanish and Catalan, Wexler etal. (2002) conducted anexperimentontypically-developingchildreninordertocheckwhetherthey produce or omit clitics and whether they produce the correctclitic forms inboth languages.Resultsshowthat inboth languages,theproducedcliticsareplacedcorrectlybeforefiniteverbsandafternon-finiteverbs.Withrespecttotherateofcliticomission,theyfoundthat Catalan-speaking children omit clitics significantly more fre-quently than Spanish-speaking children and that the omission rateis above all very high at early stages of language acquisition. Thenomissionsbegintodecreasebytheageofthreeandcompletelydisap-pearbytheageoffour.
The results of the study carried out on spontaneous speech inFrench first language acquisition by Pirvulescu (2006), and the lin-guisticresearchconductedbyHamann&Belletti(2006)onearlyL1andL2,andadultL2acquisitionofFrench,showasimilardelay inthe acquisition of object clitics. These two studies investigate theacquisitionofobjectcomplementsincomparisontosubjectpronounsandrevealthatintypicallydevelopingmonolinguals,complementcli-ticsbegintoappearaboutfourtosixmonthslaterthansubjectclitics.ThistimespanislongerinearlyandadultL2speakers.Inallcases,themostcommonstrategyusedtoovercomethedifficultiesderivingfromthenecessitytoplacethedirectobjectisagaintheuseofafulllexicalDP.However,assoonastypically-developingchildrenbegintoproduceobjectclitics,theyplacethemcorrectly,asopposedtoL2andbilingualchildren,whotendtomisplacethem.2
Hamann & Belletti (2006) also focussed their attention on theacquisition of complement clitics in French-speaking SLI children.Consistent with the results achieved by Jakubowicz etal. (1998) inthe same languagepathology, this study revealed thatSLI childrenshow lower accuracy than typically-developing children in the useofobjectcliticpronouns,comparedwithdefinitedeterminersorsub-jectpronouns.ForItalian,Leonardetal.(1992)andBortolini(2006)comparedSLIchildrenandtypically-developingchildrenintheuseof
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bothcliticpronounsanddeterminers.Althoughbothelementsprovedto be difficult for SLI children, determiners were nonetheless moreaccuratethancliticpronouns.
Theabsenceorvery rareuseof complement cliticsmaypersistforseveralyearsinSLIchildren,thetimespanfortheiracquisitionbeingevenlongerthanfortypically-developingones.
Although in thispaperweare concernedwithatypical languageacquisitiondue tohearing impairment,all thesestudies revealapat-ternofdevelopmentcommontoallacquisitionmodes.Thedifficultyandthedelay in theacquisitionof thirdpersonaccusative clitics thatallindividualsinthevariousRomancelanguages(includingItalian)showarepresumablyduetothe‘reduced’statusofthesefunctionalelements,both from a syntactic, phonological and morphological point of view(Cardinaletti&Starke1999),and to thecomplexsyntacticmovementtheyundergointheirwayuptothetopofthesyntactictreewhencom-paredtothatofweakandstrongpronouns.Thepresentstudyisonlyconcernedwiththeoccurrenceofpre-verbaldirectobjectclitics,whichoccupya functionalhead in thehighpart of the clausal structurebyattachingontotheverbthatcarriesthefeaturesoffinitemorphology.
In the next section I present some linguistic proposals thataccountfortheoccurrenceofaccusativecliticpronounswithinclausestructure.
4. Linguistic background
In this section I outline the main properties of the sentencesadministered in the experimental task, as well as issues on thesestructures raised by linguists within the framework of GenerativeGrammar.
4.1 The analysis of Clitic Left-Dislocation (CLLD)
TheItalian languagemakes itpossible for theobject tobe left-dislocated,thatis,itoccupiesapositionattheverybeginningofthesentence,intheleftperipheryofit,andaresumptivecliticisplacedbeforethefiniteverb:
(2) a.Illattei,ilbambinoloibeveognimattina. The:m.sgmilk:m.sg,thechildit:m.sg drinkseverymorning ‘Thechilddrinksiteverymorning(themilk).’
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b.Iladrii,ilpoliziottoliihaarrestatii. The:m.plthieves:m.pl,thepoliceman,them:m.pl hasarrested:m.pl
‘Thepolicemanarrestedthem(thethieves).’
Such doubling structure, in which both a full DP and a cliticpronoun appear in the sentence, is called Clitic Left Dislocation–CLLD– (Benincà 1988/2001, Cinque 1990) and is largely attestedinItalian.Inleft-dislocationsentences,cliticpronounsreferbackandare co-indexed with an antecedent (DP) previously given in the lin-guisticorextralinguisticcontext.Thecliticpronounandtheanteced-entsharethesameϕ-features.
Two types of analysis of CLLD have been put forward in theliterature.Accordingtoabase-generationhypothesis(Cinque1990),thedislocatedelementandthecliticaregenerated intheirsurfaceposition. Other studies suggest instead that these elements attainthe surface position by movement (Cinque 1977, Cecchetto 1999,Torrego1992,Belletti2005andothers).Thehypothesisadopted inthispaperisthemovementanalysisofCLLDsuggestedbyTorrego(1992)andCecchetto (1999).3Becauseof thepresenceof twoargu-ments in the direct object position, they assume that in doublingstructures likeCLLDsentences, the leftdislocatedelement isbasegeneratedintheVPinthe‘double’positionwithintheso-called‘bigDP’ argument. The clitic is thus inserted from the lexicon as theheadofthisspecialDP,whichhoststhedoubleXPinitsSpecposi-tion.
(3) VP
V BIGDP
DP X’
Doubleobject CL …
InCLLD, the topicalizedconstituentmovesandendsup in thespecifier position of a Topic projection in the left periphery of theclause(Rizzi1997),andtheresumptiveobjectcliticpronouncliticizesontotheverb.
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4.2. Past participle agreement
In configurations with compound tenses, like those in (2b) and(4),thereisovertagreementinϕ-featuresbetweenthecliticandthepastparticiple:
(4) a.Lihaarrestati. (he) them:m.plhasarrested:m.pl
‘Hehasarrestedthem.’ b.Lehaarrestate. (he) them:f.plhasarrested:f.pl
‘Hehasarrestedthem.’
Kayne(1989)suggeststhattheϕ-featuresofgenderandnumberappearingonthepastparticipleshouldbetheresultofanagreementrelation between the past participle and the moved element (nounphraseorclitic).Thesuppositionderivingfromthisassumptionisthatthere is anAgrprojectionabovepastparticiple and that themovedconstituent triggersagreement in itspassingthrough itsSpeconthewaytoitsfinallandingsite.ThisAgrprojectionwasidentifiedwiththeAgrOprojectionresponsibleforaccusativeCasecheckinginChomsky(1993).Friedemann&Siloni (1997)provideevidence that theprojec-tionassociatedwithaccusativeCase(AgrOP)istobekeptdistinctfromtheprojectionwherenumberandgender features ofpastparticiplesarechecked(labelledAgrPstPrtP),andsuggestthefollowingstructure:
(5)
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Thisstatementderivesfromsomeobservationsonpassive,unac-cusative and transitive verbs. Passives and unaccusatives (unliketransitive verbs) are unable to assign accusative Case and do notrealize an external argument. Consequently they lack the AgrOPprojection. If accusative Case assignment and past participle agree-ment were one and the same process, they would always co-occur.Onthecontrary,checkingofaccusativeCaseoccursindependentlyofthepresenceorlackofapastparticipialmorphology,andpastparti-cipleagreementiscompletelyindependentofthepresenceofaccusa-tive Case checking. This is confirmed by the obligatory agreementbetween past participle and grammatical subject with unaccusativeverbsandinpassivesentences(6a-b)orbythelackofpastparticipleagreementwithtransitiveverbstheobjectofwhichdoesnotundergocliticization(7):
(6) a.Mariaèarrivata. Maria:f.sghasarrived:f.sg
‘Mariahasarrived.’ b.LafinestrasaràapertadaMaria. Thewindow:f.sg willbeopened:f.sgbyMaria ‘ThewindowwillbeopenedbyMaria.’
(7) Giannihaapertolaporta. Giannihasopened:m.sg (default)thedoor:f.sg
‘Giannihasopenedthedoor.’
Inconclusion,cliticpronounscheckaccusativeCaseinAgrOandpastparticipleagreementinAgrPstPrtP4.Thederivationofcliticpro-nounswithsimpleandcompoundtenses isdifferentiatedas follows.Atwo-stepmovementisinvolvedinthederivationofcliticpronounswith simple tenses (Sportiche 1989; Belletti 1999; Cardinaletti &Starke1999),whereonlysyntacticeffectsarevisible:
(8) a.pro compro lemele (i) buy the:f.pl.apples:f.pl. ‘Ibuytheapples.’
b.[AgrSP pro Le compro[AgrOP__[VP__]]]
(i) them:f.pl.buy ‘Ibuythem.’
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A three-step movement is instead required in the derivationof compound tense sentences displaying past participle agreement(Belletti 1999; Friedemann & Siloni 1997; Kayne 1991), where thederivationofcliticpronounshasvisibleeffectsbothfromasyntacticandamorphologicalpointofviewandisthereforemorecomplex:
(9) a.pro Ho comprato lemele. (i) have bought the:f.pl.apples:f.pl. ‘Ihaveboughttheapples.’
b.[AgrSP pro Le ho[AgrOP___[AgrPstPrtP__comprate[VP__]]]]
(i) them:f.pl. have bought:f.pl. ‘Ihaveboughtthem.’
5. The experiment
In this section, I describe the experiment I have conducted onthree hearing-impaired adults. I present the subjects involved, thematerials and methods of administration, the results and the mainerrorsmadebytheparticipants.
5.1. The participants
Two small groups of subjects participated in the experiment: agroup composed of three adult hearing impaired bilinguals Italian/LISandacontrolgroupcomposedoffourItalian-speakingadults.
The participants belonging to the hearing impaired group arelistedinthefollowingtable:5
Table 1.Hearingimpairedparticipants.
SUBJECTS AGE LOSS(dB)S1 26 70S2 25 100S3 30 100
Noneof thehearing impaired subjects claimed towearhearingaidsatthetimeoftheexperiment,eventhoughtheyusedthemwhentheywerechildren.
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All of them were diagnosed as hearing impaired at birth andtheyacquiredtheItalianSignLanguage(LIS)astheirfirstlanguage.They were born to hearing impaired parents and mainly attendedspecialschoolsforthedeaf.SpeechtherapyandlinguistictrainingofItalianspokenlanguagewerecarriedoutduringschooltimebytheirschoolteachers.TheactivitiesthroughwhichtheyweretrainedtotheItalian language were mainly dictations and reading tasks. At themoment,allofthemareteachersofLISattheuniversityorinspecialschoolsforLISlearners.AlthoughtheyhavebeenlivinginthenorthofItalyformanyyears,theywerebornandspentsomeyearsintheSouthofItaly.
Thehearinggroupwascomposedoffourparticipants:
Table 2.Hearingparticipants.
SUBJECTS AGEVC 26LM 24ST 24LT 26
They were selected on the basis of age and above all of schooleducation(thelengthofschoolingwasatleast13years).Allofthemlive inPreganziol (Treviso) inNorthernItaly.Somehearingpartici-pantshabituallyusethedialectspokeninthisareaathomeandwiththeirfriends.
5.2. Procedure
Each participant was assessed individually and sentences wereadministeredindifferentsessionsofabout30minuteseach.Alltaskswerepresentedvisually,onseparatestripsofpaper,inordertoavoiderrorsderivingfromincorrectlip-reading.6
5.3. Materials
The experiment can be divided into two distinct parts. Theformerpartconsistsofsomepre-experimentaltasks–namelydelayedrepetition and grammar comprehension tasks– and aims at deter-miningwhethertheparticipantscouldhavedifficultiesinprocessinglongsentencesandperformingcomplextasks,aswellasinassigningθ-roles to sentence constituents. The latter part includes the maintasksandisconcernedwiththeoccurrenceofthirdpersonaccusative
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cliticsinleftdislocationsentences,andwiththecorrectagreementingenderandnumberbetweencliticsandtheirantecedentsaswellasbetweencliticsandpastparticiples.
Thepre-experimentalpartwascomposedofthefollowingtasks:• Delayed repetition task, consisting in the repetition of completelyunrelatedseriesofwords(10a)andrepetitionofsentences(10b).Thetask involving words included series from two, three, four and sixstimuli. The task involving sentence repetition included items pre-senting typical word order (Subject-Verb-Object), passive sentences,sentenceswithunaccusativeverbsselectingdativecomplementsandcliticleftdislocationsentences.
(10) a. SPECCHIO LATO SASSI
Mirror Side Stones
b. ILCANEMORDEL’UOMO
Thedogbitestheman
• A picture matching task, which is included in the B.A.D.A. test(Miceli etal. 1994). This is a visual grammar comprehension test,investigatingthecomprehensionofdifferentkindsofsentences,andtesting morphological comprehension (e.g.Gli uomini sono inseguiti dalle donne‘themenarechasedbythewomen’)andreversibility(e.g.La bambina accarezza la nonna ‘thechild:fcaressesthegrandmoth-er’)inactiveandpassivestructures.
Themainpartoftheexperimentwascomposedofthefollowingtasks:•Anelicitedproductiontask(sentencecompletiontask–SC),whichconsistedof sentences thathad tobe filled inwith thecorrect thirdperson accusative clitic and the correct form of the verb given inbrackets(113gapsintotal).Somesentencesrequiredverbsinsimpletenses (presentand imperfect)andsomeothers in compound tenses(passatoprossimo).7Somesentenceswerepresentedwiththealreadyinsertedclitic,agreeingingenderandnumberwiththeantecedent,inordertodeterminewhethertheparticipantscouldbesensitivetothepresenceofthisfunctionalelementandwhetherthecliticcouldthenhelptotriggerthepastparticipleagreementincompoundtensesen-tences.Theitemstobecompletedwithboththecliticandtheagree-ingverbinvolvedsentenceselicitingthemasculinesingularclitic lo, sentenceselicitingthe femininesingularclitic la, sentenceseliciting
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themasculinepluralcliticliand sentenceselicitingthefeminineplu-ralcliticle.
Thetaskincludedsentencessuchasthefollowingexamples:
(11) a.Tuetuofratello,laluce______(accendere),perchélastanzaeraalbuio.
Youandyourbrother, the light:f.sg ____ (to turnon),because theroomwasdark.
‘Youandyourbrother(turnedon)thelight,becausetheroomwasdark.’
b.Illadro,ipoliziotti__________(arrestare)ierisera. Thethief:m.sg,thepolicemen:m.pl_________(toarrest)lastnight. ‘Thepolicemenarrestedthethieflastnight.’ c. Icarabinieri,illadro,lo______(arrestare). thepolicemen:m.pl,thethief:m.sg,him________(toarrest). ‘Thepolicemenarrestedthethief.’
• A grammaticality judgement task (GJ), which involved givinga judgement of correctness or incorrectness to a series of items.Participantswerepresentedwith80itemscontainingagainthefourdifferent accusative clitic pronouns, the masculine singular clitic lo,the femininesingular clitic la, themasculineplural clitic liand thefemininepluralclitic le.Theungrammaticalconstructionscontainedagreementerrorsbetweenthesubjectandtheauxiliaryverb,betweenthe clitic pronoun and the object and, in the sentences with a com-poundtense,betweenthecliticpronounandthepastparticiple.Someexamplesareillustratedin(12):
(12) a.*L’alunno,ilibri,lihannochiusi,dopoaverfinitodistudiare. thestudent,the:m.plbooks:m.pl,them:Cl.m.haveclosed,afterhefinished
studying ‘Thestudenthasclosedthebooks,afterhefinishedstudying.’
b.Lamela,miofratello,l’hamangiata. The:f.sgapple:f.sg,mybrother,it:Cl.f.haseaten ‘Mybrotherhaseatentheapple.’
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5.4. Results
In this section, an account of the errors made by the partici-pantswillbegivenanddiscussedseparately for each typeof task.Theanalysisofthedatacollectedinthevariousexperimentaltasksprovedthattheerrorsmadebythethreehearingimpairedpartici-pantsarequantitatively fewandconsequentlyparticularattentionwill be paid above all to the qualitative analysis of their perform-ance.
Data resulting from sentence completion and grammatical-ity judgement tasks were analysed by using two statistical tests.The Mann Whitney test was necessary to compare the performancebetweenthetwogroups,andtheWilcoxontestwasusedtodeterminewhether a significant difference could exist in the occurrence of thefourobjectcliticforms.Resultswerecalculatedseparatelyforthetwomaintasks.
5.4.1. Performance in the pre-experimental tasksWewillstartouranalysisbyexaminingtheresultsinthediffer-
enttasksofthepre-experimentalsession.Inthesentencerepetitiontask,allparticipantsperformedatceil-
ing(Table3):In the word repetition task and in the picture matching task,
thehearingimpairedandthehearingsubjectsshowedthesamepat-ternofperformance,withapercentageofcorrectresponsesbetween85%and87% in the former (Table4),andabove95% in the latter(Table5):
TheMannWhitneytestwascarriedouttoanalysedatainthesetasks, and results did not show any significant difference betweenthetwogroupsofparticipants:wordrepetitiontaskU=5p=.724andpicturematchingtaskU=3p=.262.Thelowperformanceinthewordrepetitiontaskwasaboveallduetotherepetitionofsomeseriesofsixwords,whichwassimilarlydifficultforbothgroups.
5.4.2. Performance in the sentence completion taskByconsideringthegeneralperformanceinthesentencecomple-
tiontask,namelythesentences inwhich justverbalagreementwasrequired and those in which both clitic insertion and verbal agree-mentwererequired,itwasfoundthattherewasnosignificantdiffer-encebetweenthetwogroups:U=4p=.476.
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However, since the aim of this research in the production taskwas to investigate the correct agreement between the clitic and itsantecedent in both simple and compound tense sentences, and theagreement between the clitic and the past participle in compoundtense sentences, thepercentageof correct insertionof the cliticpro-nounsolelywascalculated.Onthewhole,aswecanseefromTable6,thehearinggroupexhibitedahigherpercentageofcorrectresponsesthanthehearingimpairedgroup(97.79%ofcorrectnessfortheformer–SD1.53and94.69%forthelatter–SD2.34):
However, theMannWhitneytestdidnotrevealanysignificantdifferencebetweenthetwogroups:U=1p=.074.
The analysis aimed at checking the correct agreement betweenthe clitic pronoun and its antecedent gives two different resultsdependingonwhetherasimpleoracompoundtensewasrequiredinthesentences.
In compound tense sentences, where the participants had toinsertboththecliticandthepastparticipialverb,theaveragelevelofaccuracyisabove90%forbothgroups,aswecanseefromthefollow-ingtable:
Even though the hearing group achieved higher scores thanthehearingimpairedgroup(HG:99.39%–SD1.22–HIG:93.45%– SD 6.27), results showed no significant difference between thetwogroups:U=2.5p=0.172.Theerrorsidentifiedareerrorsofsub-stitution of the correct morphology with the unmarked form, butthecliticalwayscorrectlyagreedwiththepastparticipleinallsen-tences.8
Theperformance in simple tense sentences showedaveryhighrate of success for both groups (98,09% – SD 0.82 for the hearinggroupand99,54%–SD0.79forthehearingimpairedone).9
Thistableshowsthatthedifferencebetweenthepercentagesofthetwogroups isquitesmall.Surprisingly, the impairedgroupper-formed almost at ceiling and obtained higher percentages of correctresponsesthanthehearingone.
5.4.3. Performance in the grammaticality judgement taskA similarly unexpected result occurred in the grammatical-
ity judgement task where the performance of the hearing impairedparticipantswassignificantlybetterthanthatof thehearinggroup:U=.500p=.048.Withinthehearingimpairedgroup,twoparticipantsperformedatceilinginthistask,whilethethirdmadeonlytwoerrorswithpluralforms.
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The lower performance of the hearing group compared withthe hearing impaired one is mainly concerned with the incorrectjudgement of those items containing a plural subject and the thirdperson singular form of the auxiliary.10 Some hearing participantshave judgedascorrectasentence like (13),whereamismatcherrorbetweenthepluralsubjectandthesingularauxiliaryispresent:
(13) *Igiardinieri,glialberi,lihapotati. Thegardeners,thetrees,them:Clhaspruned ‘Thegardenershaveprunedthetrees.’
Thisphenomenonisprobablyrelatedtothefactthatthesehear-ingparticipantsuse theVenetandialectas their first languageandare influenced by it when speaking Italian. In the dialect, the verbhas the same form in the singular and the plural, and this formresemblesthesingularformofItalian:
(14) Igiardinieri,ialberi,(i)ligapotai. Thegardeners,thetrees,(Subj.Cl)them:Clhaspruned
ThecorrectItaliansentenceis:
(15) Igiardinieri,glialberi,lihannopotati. Thegardeners,thetrees,them:Clhavepruned
5.4.4. Performance in the different combinations of gender and number features
A non-parametric related sample test (Wilcoxon) was carriedout in order to compare the use of gender and number features ofclitic pronouns in the sentence completion and in the grammatical-ity judgement tasks, to determine whether participants could bemoresensitivetothemanipulationofsentencescontainingaspecificgenderand/ornumberfeature.Thefollowingcomparisonswerethuscarriedout,firstconsideringtheoppositionbetweensingleclitics(16)andthentheoppositionbetweenpairsofclitics(17)separatelyinthetwodifferenttasks:
(16) • masculinesingularvs.femininesingular(lovs.la) • femininesingularvs.feminineplural(lavs.le) • masculinepluralvs.feminineplural(livs.le) • masculinesingularvs.masculineplural(lovs.li),
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(17) • masculinevs.feminine(lo+livs.la+le) • singularvs.plural(la+lovs.li+le)
Figure 1 shows the percentage of correct answers of the wholegroupforeachcliticpronounandseparatelyforeachofthetwomaintasks(sentencecompletiontaskandgrammaticalityjudgementtask).Intheelicitedproductiontask,pluralcliticsliandlehavethehigh-estrateofaccuracy.Thesituation is inverted inthegrammaticalityjudgement task, where items with singular forms lo and la show ahigherrateofsuccesswithrespecttothepluralonesliandle.
Figure 1.Percentageofcorrectresponsespercliticpronounforeachofthetwomaintasksconsideringallparticipants.
In the grammaticality judgement task, the greatest number oferrorswithpluralcliticsconcernsthemismatchbetweenthesubjectand the auxiliary (see section 5.4.3. example (13)). For this reason,onlyresultsonthesentencecompletiontaskwillbeconsideredfromhereon.
By examining the accuracy of single clitics within the wholegroup (hearing and hearing impaired groups) using the Wilcoxontest, a significant difference is attested in the elicited production ofaccusativecliticsregardingtheoppositionbetweenfemininesingular(la)andfeminineplural(le):Z=-2.032p=0.042.Inthegrammaticalityjudgementtask,nosignificantdifferenceisnoticed.
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Figure 2.Numberandgendercliticoppositioninthetwomaintaskswithinthe hearing-impairedgroup.
Inthesentencecompletiontask,inthoseitemsrequiringacom-poundtense,theoppositionbetweenpairsofcliticswasalsoanalyzedtodeterminewhethersomefeatures(genderand/ornumber)couldbeperformedbetterthanothers.Byconsideringthewholegroupofpar-ticipants,nosignificantdifferencewasattestedinthediscriminationbetween singular and plural and between masculine and femininefeatures.Asfarasnumberfeaturesareconcerned,thelackofsignifi-canceisduetothefactthatthehearinggroupachievedhigherscoresonsingularthanonpluralfeatures,whilethehearingimpairedgroupshowedthereversedpattern(seefigure3):
Figure 3.Oppositionbetweensingularandpluralfeaturesineachgroupofparticipants.
Byconsideringonlythehearingimpairedgroup,asignificantdif-ferenceisattestedinthediscriminationbetweenpluralandsingular(li-le>la-lo):Z=–2.032p=0.042.
To summarize all results, a between-group analysis revealedthat in the sentence completion task, no significance is attestedbetweenthetwogroupsofparticipants,while inthegrammaticality
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judgement task the hearing impaired group performed significantlybetterthanthecontrolgroup.Interestingfindingshaveemergedfroma within-group analysis, in which the performance in the differentcombinationsofgenderandnumberfeaturesinthesentencecomple-tiontaskwasconsidered.Contrarytowhatonecouldexpect,resultsdemonstrate a clear predominance of correctness rate in sentencesrequiringpluralfeatures,andsometimesspecificallyfemininepluralfeatures.
Before looking at the linguistic theories that could help usexplainsuchbehaviour,letusexaminemorecloselythetypeoferrorsthatthetwogroupsofparticipantsmade.
5.5. The relevant errors
5.5.1. The hearing impaired groupThe performance of the three hearing impaired participants
showedanoverallhighlevelofaccuracyintheresponsestheyprovid-edandthenumberoferrorsmadebythemisverylow,provingthatimpairmentisveryselective.Sinceerrorsarequantitativelyfew,themostinterestingobservationsandgeneralizationscanbedrawnfromtheanalysisofthedataobtainedinthesentencecompletiontaskandthis section attempts to give an explanation for the non standardformsproducedbythesubjects.
Theerrorsproducedbyparticipantscanbedividedintotwomaintypologies:
• omissionofthecliticpronounanduseoftheunmarkedformofthepastparticiple11
• substitution of the correct gender and number morphologywiththeunmarkedone,i.e.masculinesingular12
The hypothesis explaining the first type of errors would be theretrievalofapost-verbalnullobjectpronoun(pro) insteadofacliticpronoun.Theexistenceof thisnullobjectpronounhasalreadybeenprovenforItalianbyRizzi(1986)insentenceslike(18),where‘pro’islicensedbyVandisassignedanarbitraryinterpretation:
(18) Unmedicoseriovisitaproinudii
Aseriousdoctorvisitsproiunclothed:m.pli
Thenullobject retrievalhypothesishasalsobeenproposedbyTuller(2000)forFrenchhearingimpairedindividuals.Althoughthepresenceofthisnullobjectpronounisillicitinthecorpusproducedby the subjects she tested, the French spoken language does not
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excludetheoccurrenceofthiselementinsomespecificcontexts(forexample, inheraccount,whencorrespondingtosufficientlysalienttopics).
IntheCLLDsentencesadministeredinthesentencecompletiontask,theparticipantsomitthecliticbecausetheypresumablyretrievetheweakpronominalelementinthecanonicalobjectposition,whichis not correct in the corpus they produce, but which is nonethelesslicit intheparticularstructureof Italianseen in (18).13 (In (19)andthroughout,theunderlinedwordsarethoseproducedbythepartici-pants):
(19) *La lezionei, il professore aveva spiegato proi due volte, perché iragazzinonavevanocapitoniente.
The:f.sg lesson:f.sg, the teacher had explained:m.sg.(default) pro twice,becausethestudentshadnotunderstoodanything.
‘Theteacherexplainedthelessontwice,becausethestudentsdidnotunderstandanything.’
ThesesentenceshavethesamestructureasthoseadministeredintheexperimentcarriedoutinVolpato(2002),wherethesamekindoferrorhasalsobeenmadebythetwohearingimpairedparticipantsFRandGR14.
Itshouldbenotedthattheunmarkedformofthepastparticiplein(19)(spiegato‘explained:m.sg’)excludesanotherpotentialanalysis,namelythatthecliticpronounissimplynon-overt.Ifacliticpronounwerepresentinthesyntacticderivation,wecouldexpecttheagreeingformofthepastparticiple(spiegata‘explained:f.sg’).ThiscorrespondswithCardinaletti’s(2002)conclusionsthatnullcliticpronounsdonotexist.
Turningourattentionnowtothesubstitutionerror,wefindthatitusuallyoccurredwhenacompoundtenseandthefemininesingularclitic were required. In this case, the hearing impaired participantsuse the default morphology on the past participle, as the followingexampleshows:
(20) *Lacenaperibambini,lamammal’hapreparatoprimadiandarealristorante.
The:f.sg.dinner:f.sg.forthechildren,the:f.sgmother:f.sgit:Clhasprepared:m.sg,beforegoingtotherestaurant.
‘The mother prepared dinner for the children, before going to therestaurant.’
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This sentence is ungrammatical because the past participledoesnotcorrectlyagreeingenderwiththeleftdislocatedconstitu-ent (target: La cena (…) la mamma l’ha preparata ‘The:f.sg. din-ner:f.sg. (…), the:f.sgmother:f.sg it:Clhasprepared:f.sg’).Lookingonlyattheclitic,itisnotclearwhetheritisinthemasculineorthefeminine form, because with compound tenses, the gender featureisnot overtlymarkedon the cliticpronounand the elided form (l)is correct both for the masculine and the feminine singular (l’hapreparato/l’hapreparata).However,sinceitisevidentfromtheourearlieranalysis that the testedparticipantsalwaysmakethecliticcorrectlyagreewiththepastparticiple,Iassumethat inthiscase,thecliticandthepastparticiplealsosharethesamegenderfeature(masculine singularo). Hence it follows that the feminine singularformhasbeenreplacedbytheunmarkedone (masculinesingular).ItisworthpointingoutthatthissubstitutionoccursmainlywhenasingularfeminineNPispresent(itoccursonlyoncewiththemascu-lineplural).15
Theaspectthatiscommontobothtypesoferrors–omissionandsubstitution–isthatboththeobject‘pro’in(19)andtheoccurrenceoftheunspecifiedcliticlin(20)alwaystriggerthedefaultpastpartici-pleagreement(o).
5.5.2. The control groupBy turning our attention to the performance of the control
subjects, it is worth pointing out that the sentences they producedalso include some errors and non-standard forms. The type of erroroccurringintheirperformanceandwhichalsooccurs inthehearingimpairedgroupistheomissionofthecliticinaverysmallamountofitems.
Apart from the omission errors like those described above,there are non-standard forms that occur only in some sentencesproducedby twoof thehearingparticipants. In these cases,as farasgenderandnumberfeaturesareconcerned,theclitictheychooseisundoubtedlycorrect(lafemininesingular),butthefullformtheyuseisnotacceptableinthestandardlanguage,sinceonlytheelidedformofthisclitic isgrammatical.16Thiskindoferror is illustratedin(21):
(21) *Lavaligia,ilfacchinodell’hotellahaportataincamera. thesuitcase:f.sg.,theporterof-thehotelit:Cl.f hasbroughtintotheroom ‘Thehotelporterbroughtthesuitcaseintotheroom.’
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Inthestandardlanguage,thecorrectformofthissentencewouldbeasin(22),wherethegenderfeatureisnotovertlymarkedonthecliticpronoun:
(22) Lavaligia,ilfacchinodell’hotell’haportataincamera.
Whatisworthobservingisthatthiserroroccursmainlyinthoseparticipants who habitually speak the Venetan dialect during dailyinteractionswith familyand friends.17Since sentences like (21) arenotacceptedinStandardItalian,itisthuspossiblethatcontrolsub-jectsareusingaformofhypercorrectionthathasbeeninfluencedbytheVenetandialect,wherethefiniteformoftheauxiliaryverb‘have’hasadifferentphoneticandphonologicalcontentwithrespecttothatoftheItalianform.IntheVenetandialect,thethirdpersonindicativepresent auxiliary is realized as ga, thus forcing the presence of thenon-elidedfemininesingularcliticform:
(23) Avaisa,elfachin(...)laga portada...
ThefollowingparadigmsarefoundinItalianandinthedialect:
(24)
STANDARDITALIAN VENETANDIALECTloha/l’ha loga
l’ha lagaliha ligaleha ligaleha lega
Table10summarizesthedifferenttypesoferrorsmadebybothgroupsofparticipantsinthesentencecompletiontask:
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Table 10.Typeoferrorsinthesentencecompletiontaskforbothgroups.Type of errors example group
Omission
Useofunmarkedp.p.morphology
*Lalezione,ilprofessoreaveva spiegatoduevolteThe.f.sg.lesson.f.sg.,theteacherhadexplained.m.sg.twice
Hearingimpairedgroup/
Hearinggroup
Substitution
Useofunmarkedmorphology
*Lacenaperibambini,lamammal’ha preparatoThe.f.sg.dinner.f.sg.forthechildren,the.f.sg. mother.f.sg.it.clhasprepared.m.sg.
Hearingimpairedgroup
Hypercorrection(influenceofVenetandialect)Useofthefullfeminineform
*Lavaligia,ilfacchinodell’hotella ha portataincameraThesuitcase.f.sg.theporterof-thehotelit.cl.f.hasbroughtintotheroom
Hearinggroup
Toaccountforthesubstitutionerrors,thenextsectionwilloffersomeexplanationsonhowgenderandnumberfeaturesarerepresent-edandprocessedinclausestructure.
6. Discussion: gender and number features on clitic pronouns
The results and the error typologies explained in the previ-ous sections reveal that the level of accuracy of the three hearingimpairedindividualsontheproposedstructuresisquitehigh.
Thecorrectproductionandplacementofmost clitics,mainly insimple tense sentences, is clear evidence that left dislocation itselfdoes not represent a problem for hearing impaired individuals and,despite someerrors,all thenodesof the syntactic treeare correctlyprojected in thegrammarof theseparticipants.Becauseofawidelyattestedpresenceofcliticpronounsinmostsentences,thereasonforomissionandsubstitutionerrorsmustbefoundelsewhere.
Asalreadyexplainedinsection4,CLLDinvolvesthepreposingofaconstituentthatislinkedtoitsargument/canonicalposition.TheleftdislocatedXP,pronouncedwithoutanystressandassociatedwithalreadyknown information, co-occurswitha coreferential clitic pro-nounwithwhichitsharesnumberandgenderfeatures.
Although limited innumber,mosterrorsproducedbythehear-ing impaired participants are found in compound tense sentences,where past participle agreement in gender and number with cliticpronouns is also required. The difficulties that the subjects encoun-teredwithgenderandnumbermarkersleadustodiscusstheerrorspresentinthecorpuswithintheframeworkofthecurrentresearchonϕ-features.
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What is most relevant to the aim of this discussion is that thedata collected during the experiment showed a significant differ-enceintheoccurrenceanduseofthefouraccusativecliticpronouns,provingabetterperformanceonthosemarkedwithplural (number)featuresas opposed to singular ones.This evidence on thedifferentnatureandbehaviourofcliticpronounsthuscontributestostrength-ensomesyntactic,morpho-phonologicalandpsycholinguisticpropos-alsthataccountforthetriggeringforceofnumberongender.Theseproposalswillformthetopicsfordiscussioninthenextsections.
6.1. The syntactic proposal
Onthebasisofthedataandtheresultsobtainedfromtheexperi-ment,itisclearthattheparticipants’performancevariesaccordingtospecific features displayed by clitic pronouns. We now discuss howthese features are represented syntactically. Harris (1991), Kayne(2000)andFerrari(2005)suggestthatthirdpersonaccusativecliticsarecomplexelementsthatcanbesplitintotwodistinctmorphemes:theconsonantalmorphemelwithoutspecificcharacterizationforgen-derand/ornumber,andtherelevantgenderandnumbermarker(l+o,l+a, l+i, l+e).Althoughthese featuresappear tobehave in thesameway,thereseemstobeanunderlyingasymmetryinthewaynumberandgenderarespecifiedonthemorphemel.
Much linguistic literature is devoted to the description of theway gender and number features are encoded and represented inthe syntactic tree. Ritter (1995) and Di Domenico (1997) postulatethat gender information is encoded differently from number infor-mationandconsequentlyitisrepresentedstructurallyinadifferentmanner.ForlanguagessuchasHebrew,Ritter(1995)proposesthatgenderisafeatureofN(25b),becauseitappearsonthenounstematall representational levels,while inRomance languages, genderispartofthenumberphrase(25a),asthefollowingrepresentationsshow:
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(25)
DiDomenico(1997)offersaslightlydifferentstructuralanalysisfor Italian, by distinguishing between the representation of gram-matical gender and that of semantic gender. Grammatical genderispartof the lexical entryof thenoun (as in (25b)),while semanticgenderisprojectedtogetherwithnumberunderNumP(asin(25a)).Both authors assume that number projects its own syntactic head.Thenounphrasehasapluraldenotationonlywhenthenumbersuf-fixheadsadistinctfunctionalprojection.Asfaraspronounsarecon-cerned,sincetheylacktheNPprojection,genderisspecifiedonandprojectedwithnumber:
(26)
Insummary,numberisasyntactichead,separatelyrepresentedinthelexiconandautonomouslyprojectedinsyntax,whilegenderisprojected in syntax either with number (see (25a) and (26)) or withthenoun(see(25b)).
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ThesyntacticanalysisoftheItaliannominalsystemsuggestedby Ferrari (2005) strongly corroborates the structure proposed byRitter(1995),byconvincinglyarguingthatpluralfeaturesarereal-izedbyMergeofafurtherprojection(NumP)intotheclausestruc-ture. In Ferrari’s proposal, Number is projected only in the pluraland not with singular features. The assumption that the numberprojectionispresentonlyinthepluralhasstrongconsequencesforthe representation of gender features.However, this issuewillnotbe addressed in this paper but will be further developed in futurework.
6.2. The morpho-phonological proposal
Gender and number markers in third person accusative cliticsare suppressed under certain conditions. Let us examine the datainTable11concerningtheoccurrenceofcliticpronounswithsimpletenses:
Table 11.Formofcliticpronounwithsimpletenses.
LO LAloamo *l’amo laamo *l’amoloami *l’ami laami *l’amiloama *l’ama laama *l’amaloamiamo *l’amiamo laamiamo *l’amiamoloamate *l’amate laamate *l’amateloamano *l’amano laamano *l’amano
LI LEliamo *l’amo leamo *l’amoliami *l’ami leami *l’amiliama *l’ama leama *l’amaliamiamo *l’amiamo leamiamo *l’amiamoliamate *l’amate leamate *l’amateliamano *l’amano leamano *l’amano
The data on lo and la are from the Venetan variety of Italian.Theelidedformsofloandlaareungrammatical.OtherItalianvarie-tiesallowthatinsimpletenses,thesingularmasculineandfemininemarkerscanbesuppressedinfrontofverbsbeginningwithavowel.In other words, overt markedness is not obligatory with singularforms, and sometimes the morpheme l can appear instead of thebimorphemicloandla.Garrapa(2007)claimsthatdorsalword-finalvowelsarenotlikelytodropiftheyarenotrecoverablefromthecon-
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text,asinla amo ‘Iloveher’, lo amo ‘Ilovehim’,althoughtheelidedformmightalsobeacceptable.Incliticsspecifiedforpluralfeatures,coronalvowels/i/and/e/areinsteadalwayspreserved.18
Things are slightly different with compound tenses, in whichbothanauxiliaryandthepastparticipialverbappear,andthereforegender and number features are marked both on the clitic pronounandonthepastparticiplemorphology.Theoccurrenceofobjectcliticsisillustratedinthefollowingtable:
Table 12.Formofcliticpronounswithcompoundtenses.
LO LA*lohovisto l’hovisto *lahovista l’hovistalohaivisto l’haivisto *lahaivista l’haivistalohavisto l’havisto *lahavista l’havistaloabbiamovisto l’abbiamovisto *laabbiamovista l’abbiamovistaloavetevisto l’avetevisto *laavetevista l’avetevistalohannovisto l’hannovisto *lahannovista l’hannovista
LI LElihovisti *l’hovisti lehoviste *l’hovistelihaivisti *l’haivisti lehaiviste *l’haivistelihavisti *l’havisti lehaviste *l’havisteliabbiamovisti *l’abbiamovisti leabbiamoviste *l’abbiamovisteliavetevisti *l’avetevisti leaveteviste *l’avetevistelihannovisti *l’hannovisti lehannoviste *l’hannoviste
In compound tenses, accusative clitic pronouns behave differ-entlyfromeachotheraccordingtothefeaturestheypossess.Table12shows that incliticsmarkedas [+plural],ϕ-featuresarealwaysvis-ibleonthemorphemel,whilesingularcliticsundergovoweldeletion.Inparticular,cliticsspecifiedfor[feminine]gender,areungrammati-cal inthenon-elidedform,whilemasculinearegrammaticalbothintheelidedandinthenon-elidedform.
Onthebasisofdatacollectedfrominformantsspeakinganorth-ernvarietyofStandardItalian(spokeninLecco),Garrapa(2007)pro-posestheVowelDeletionScalepresentedin(27):
(27) a>o>i>e19
This implicational scale is applicable to accusative clitic pro-nouns both in simple and compound tenses. In order to try to gen-
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eralize on thisphenomenon, it ispossible to infer thatplural cliticsalways appear with gender and number features overtly markedon the morpheme l, while for singular clitics the occurrence variesaccordingtodifferentfactors.MorphemesthatrealizetheNumheadcannotbeelided.Thisthusseemstorepresentthetriggeringelement.Theaccurateperformancewithpluralcliticsthatwehaveobservedinthehearingimpairedindividualsseemstobeduetothismorpho-pho-nologicalvisibility.
6.3. The psycholinguistic proposal
The syntactic and the morpho-phonological analyses, whichaccountforthespecificationofgenderandnumbermarkersoncliticpronouns, have strong consequences for the development of a psy-cholinguisticproposalrelatedtotheprocessingofthesefeatures.
As we have seen in 6.1., the presence of number specifica-tion [+plural] involves the activation of a further syntactic projec-tion (NumP) with respect to singular markers (Ferrari 2005). It isworth remembering that economy principles tend to lead speakersto perform the least costly operations, thus forcing them to choosethe structure containing unmarked forms, not involving the NumPprojection.20Althoughthechoiceoftheunmarkedformisindeedthestrategypreferredbythehearingimpairedindividualsinsubstitutionerrors, it is evident that in thedifferent combinationsof ϕ-features,theparticipantsnonethelessshowedahigherlevelofaccuracyonplu-ralratherthanonsingularforms.
According to the approaches developed by Ritter (1995) and DiDomenico (1997), the different linguistic representation of the twofeaturesisrelevantbecause,sincegenderisnotaheadwithitsownfunctional projection, it is not visible to the syntactic parser. Thisphenomenon has strong consequences on the interpretation of ele-ments containing both features. From a psycholinguistic point ofview,byassumingamodular theoryof languageprocessing,genderinformation is used by the parser later than number informationsince, according to Kimball (1973) and Frazier (1985), the syntacticprocessorusesonlytheinformationrelevanttothesyntacticlevelofanalysis, inordertoassignastructuralrepresentationtothe input.Therefore, at this initial processing stage only those features thatprojectautonomouslyinsyntaxandthataremorevisiblefromamor-pho-phonologicalpointofviewwillbeeasilyrecognizedandcomputedbytheparser.Hence,sinceonlynumberfeaturesheadtheirownsyn-tacticprojection,onlynumberinformationwouldbeusedtoestablish
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a co-reference between the noun and the pronoun. Gender informa-tion,althoughovertlymarkedonthenoun,shouldnotbeavailableatthesameextentasnumberinformation.21
Thevalidityofthisapproachhasbeenconfirmedbythefindingsof an experiment runbyDeVincenzi&DiDomenico (1999) explor-ingtheprocessingofgenderandnumberfeaturesintheretrievalofpronounantecedentsinItalian.Thisexperimentprovesthatnumberfeaturesconstitutethemorphologicalinformationthatisfirstlyusedtoselectapronounantecedent.Incontrast,genderinformationdoesnothave the same reactivation effect as thatderiving fromnumberinformation.
The conclusion drawn by De Vincenzi & Di Domenico (1999)is confirmed by the analysis of the data gathered from the presentexperiment on the three hearing impaired individuals. Indeed thisexperiment supports the hypothesis of the difference in the use ofgender and number information on clitic pronouns, clearly provingthatnumberinformationisretrievedearlierthangenderinformationand thus justifying the better performance in sentences containingcliticsspecifiedforplural featurescomparedwiththosespecifiedforsingularones.
7. Conclusion
In thispaperwehaveanalysed the competenceof thirdpersonaccusative clitic pronouns in CLLD by hearing impaired individu-als. The presence of high scores in the performance of the hearingimpaired group (sometimes higher than those of the control group)leadstotheconclusionthattheimpairmentisverylimitedandthatthelinguisticcompetenceisquiteintact.Theresultsarenonethelessusefultoshedlightonsomelinguisticaspectsthatconfirmpreviouslinguisticfindingsconcerningϕ-features.
Thecollecteddataconfirmthedifferentstatusofthefourthird-personaccusativecliticpronounsaccordingtothecombinationofgen-derandnumberfeatures.Whengenderfeaturesarenotvisibleonthepronounbecausethevoweliselided,asinthefemininesingular,gen-der features are not accessible. On the other hand, gender featuresare always accessible in the plural. This proves that it is easier toproducethoseformsthestructureofwhichiscomplexfromamorpho-syntacticpointofview,i.e.structuresspecifiedforpluralfeatures([i],[e]).Incontrast,cliticpronounsspecifiedforsingularfeatures([o],[a])aredifficultnotonlyfromamorphologicalandsyntacticpointofview
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butalsofromaphonologicalone,becausetheymaylackovertrealiza-tion.Furthermore, since these featuresdonotprojectautonomouslyinsyntax,theyarecomputedwithdifficultyandarehardlyvisibletothesyntacticprocessor.Hence,consistentlywithamodulartheoryoflanguage processing, individuals find it easier to produce the struc-turethatissyntacticallymorecomplex,withthegreatestnumberofcheckedvisiblefeatures,becausetheyhavemoreevidenceofit,thusconfirmingatriggeringforceforpluralnumberfeaturesasopposedtosingularones,andthusprovingthatmorphosyntacticandpsycholin-guisticperspectivesconvergeontothesameconclusions.
Address of the Author
Francesca Volpato, Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia, Dipartimento diScienzedelLinguaggio,Dorsoduro1075,30123Venezia
<fravol@unive.it>
Notes
* I would like to thank Anna Cardinaletti for her help in the data analysisandforhercommentsontheearlierversionsofthispaper.IalsowishtothankElisaDiDomenico,FrancaFerrari,StavroulaStavrakaki,VirginiaVolterraandtwoanonymousreviewers for theirsuggestionsandhelpfulcomments.Aspecialthanks to the seven participants, for their availability and collaboration in thedata collection. I am also thankful to Iulia Zegrean and Nicholas Langley forreviewingmyEnglish.1 Although the individualsanalysed inChesi (2000,2006)andVolpato (2002)areall hearing impaired, it is worth considering that the population of deaf people isextremelyheterogeneousandthatmanyfactorsinfluencethedevelopmentoflanguagebytheseindividuals(ageatonsetofhearingloss,degreeofhearingloss,useofhear-ingaids,durationofuseofhearingaids,etc.).Theheterogeneitywithinthispopula-tionmakesitdifficulttocarryoutastraightforwardcomparisonbetweenthesamplesinvolvedinthesestudies.Forthisreason,theexplanationforsuchvariabilityandforthedifferenceinperformancebetweenthegroupsisnotaddressedinthispaper.2 Actually,childrenwholearnasecondlanguagesometimestendtotransfertheparametric settingsof the first language to thegrammarof the second language,givingrisetonon-target-likeperformance.Inthiscase, therefore, the influenceofoneofthetwounderlyinggrammaticalsystemsallowsauniqueanalysisofobjectpronounsforbothlanguagesthusallowingobjectcliticstooccupypositionswhere,inoneofthetwolanguages,onlylexicalDPsorstrongpronounsareusuallyplaced.3 Theaimofthispaperisnottogivesupporttooneortheotherhypothesisandforthisreason,themovementhypothesiswillonlybeadoptedforthesakeofthepresentation.4 In most recent theories (Chomsky 1995), the AgrO projection is no longerassumed, but the projection responsible for past participle agreement is stillpresentinclausestructure.
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5 According to BIA (Bureau International d’Audiophonologie), four categoriesofhearinglossarerecognized:mild(26to40dB),moderate(41to70dB),severe(71to90dB)andprofound(greaterthan91dB).Inthehearingimpairedgroup,aparticipantwithmoderatehearingimpairment(S1)wasalsoincluded.However,it isworthconsideringthatS1,having70dBhearing loss, isat theupper limitof moderate impairment, very close to the severe one, and that someone withanaudiologicalhearing lossof70dB,withouthearingaids,mayfunctionallybeconsideredasprofoundlydeaf(Bakeretal.2005).Althoughmoststudiesfocusonsevere-to-profounddeafness,somerecentresearchmainlyconcernedwithmild-to-moderatehearing lossprovedthatevenlowdegreesofhearing impairmentmaybe crucialandprevent individuals fromdevelopinga complete linguistic compe-tence(Delage&Tuller2007).6 Although the hearing-impaired participants were tested through the writtenmodality,theproposedtasksaimatinvestigatingthemoregenerallinguisticcom-petenceoftheItalianlanguage,andnotspecificallythecompetenceinthewrittenlanguage.7 Althoughinsomesentencestheproductionofacompoundtensewasexpected,theproductionofadifferenttensewasalsoconsideredcorrect.8 Foramoredetailedaccountofthistypeoferror,seesection5.5.1.9 Someerrorsareduetotheuseofanincorrecttenseinthemainclause.Sincetheaimofthisstudyismainlytheanalysisofthecorrectinsertionandagreementof the clitic pronounwith its antecedentandwith thepastparticiple, the tenseerrors(consecutio temporum)arenotconsideredandaccountedforinthispaper.Iincludedtheresultshereforcompleteness.10 Sincethepresentanalysisfocusesontheuseofgenderandnumbermorpholo-gy,thepersonmismatchbetweenthesubjectandthefiniteverbisnotconsidered,butresultshavehoweverbeenincludedforanoverallaccountoftheperformance.11 Omission errors are rarely attested in simple tense sentences, the omissionrateishigherinthoserequiringacompoundtense.12 FollowingPretto(1985),Iassumethat,inItalian,masculineistheunmarkeddefaultgenderandfeminineisthemarkedgender.13 Ananonymousreviewerhaspointedoutthattheseleft-dislocationsentencesmighthavebeenmentallyrehearsedbytheparticipantasassociatedwithacon-trastivefocusintonation:(i) la leZione,ilprofessoreavevaspiegatoduevolte The leCTure,theprofessorhadexplainedtwiceInthisway,itwouldbeincorrecttoconsiderthemasungrammatical.Actually,sentenceslike(i)mightbeacceptableinparticularcontexts,suchascontras-tive focus.However, in ‘out-of-the-blue’ contexts the contrastive intonationhas tobeexcluded,andforthisreason,sentenceslike(19)havebeenconsideredasincorrect.14 Inthepresentexperimentalinvestigation,theomissionofthecliticpronounisalsoattestedinsomesentencesfilledinbythehearinggroup.15 Thesame tendencyhasbeen identifiedbyCiprianietal. (1993) in typically-developingchildrenatearlystagesoflanguageacquisition.Fromthe24thtothe31stmonthofage,whenchildrenbegintousecliticsproductively,theysubstitutesome formswithsomeothers in thepreverbalposition (rarely in thepostverbalposition).Themostcommonerrortypologiesarethoseconcerninggenderfeatures(loinsteadofla)andnumberfeature(lo insteadofli).16 Foramoredetailedmorpho-phonologicalaccountexplainingtheoccurrenceofthedifferentcliticforms,seesection6.2.17 The same error is also performed by one of the control subjects (CTRL2) inVolpato (2002).Thisparticipantaswell speaksavariety of theVenetandialectandusesithabitually.
Francesca Volpato
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18 InsomelinguisticvarietiesofcentralandsouthernItaly,the‘reduced’formofthepluralcliticslincompoundtensessometimesoccurs(Garrapatoappearaandb).ThesubjectsofmyexperimentallspeakNorthernvarieties,inwhichthedataintables1and2hold.19 ‘>’meansmorefrequentlyelided.20 Theexpression‘economyprinciples’isintendedhereinwidesense,assimplic-ityofrepresentation,onthebasisofwhichpeopleareledtochoosethesimplestnumeration.21 To support thedifferentdegreeof salience thatgenderandnumber featureshave, the implicational relations to one another is predicted by the FeatureHierarchyproposedbyCarminati(2004):
(i) (Person)>Number>Gender
showingthatnumberplaysagreaterroleinthedisambiguationofpronounsthangender.Thisevidencethussupportsallproposalsthatassignthesefeaturesadif-ferentgrammaticalstatusinthecoresyntax.
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