J. Terken et J. Hirschberg, DEACCENTUATION OF WORDS REPRESENTING GIVEN INFORMATION - EFFECTS OF PERSISTENCE OF GRAMMATICAL FUNCTION AND SURFACE POSITION, Language and Speech, 37, 1994, pp. 125-145
The absence of intonational prominence on a referring expression (deac
centuation) is commonly explained as a consequence of the GIVENness of
the discourse entity referred to - the fact that it represents old in
formation in the discourse. However, speakers sometimes use accented e
xpressions to refer to such GIVEN entities, so that GIVENness is not a
sufficient explanation for deaccentuation. It has also been suggested
that speakers tend to express GIVEN entities as grammatical subjects
and to mention them early in the utterance. The present work investiga
tes the contributions of grammatical role and surface position to the
occurrence of deaccentuation in English. An experiment is reported in
which speakers produced descriptions of visual materials, where the co
ntent of the materials was manipulated so that successive descriptions
contained coreferential expressions, and grammatical role and surface
position varied systematically. The results indicate that persistence
of grammatical role and surface position from one utterance to the ne
xt both contribute to deaccentuation. Some implications for the way in
which listeners may link referring expressions to entities which are
already available from the context are discussed.