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Original Article

Implicit prosody and parsing in silent reading

Ronit Webman‐Shafran

Corresponding Author

E-mail address: ronit.shafran@gmail.com

Beit Berl Academic College, Faculty of Education, The English Department, , Israel

Address for correspondence: Ronit Webman Shafran, Beit Berl Academic College, Faculty of Education, The English Department, 49B Golomb Street, Kefar Sava 4435749, Israel. E‐mail:

ronit.shafran@gmail.com

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First published: 28 July 2017

Abstract

Background

The current study explored the effect of implicit prosody on syntactic parsing in the silent reading of an ambiguous double prepositional phrase (PP) construction in Hebrew by employing the Implicit Prosody Hypothesis test (Fodor, 2002).

Method

The parsing preferences of the construction in silent reading were tested and compared to those in a reading aloud study (Webman‐Shafran & Fodor, 2016) containing the same experimental material.

Results

The parsing results were remarkably similar.

Conclusions

It is suggested that implicit prosody was responsible for syntactic ambiguity resolution preferences in silent reading in the current study in the same way as overt prosody in reading aloud in Webman‐Shafran and Fodor (2016). This study supports the assumption that reading prosody is projected in silent reading and affects comprehension.

Implications

The contribution of implicit prosody to the reading process may have important implications for reading instruction in FLA, SLA and reading disorder intervention programs.