Corpora: REQ: examples of "garden path anaphora"

From: Josef Meyer (jmeyer@ics.mq.edu.au)
Date: Fri Nov 17 2000 - 07:11:47 MET

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    Hello,

    My apologies to those of you who end up receiving more than one copy
    of this message.

    I am currently looking at what I will refer to as "garden path
    anaphora". I am using this term to refer to cases in which the
    reader/hearer will tend to have a strong preference for resolving an
    anaphoric expression in one way, and then be forced to an alternative
    interpretation on encountering a subsequent utterance. The following
    is a slightly contrived example to illustrate what I mean:

       1. Robert gave Steven a paper last week. He thought that it provided
          a good method for dealing with indirect anaphora. Steven disagreed.

       2. Robert gave Steven a paper last week. He thought that it provided
          a good method for dealing with indirect anaphora. Robert had
          actually given Steven the paper for another reason entirely.

    I would argue that the interpretation in example (1) is the default,
    where "he" fairly clearly refers to "Robert". By my reading, example
    (2) shows that this initial preference can be overturned. What I am
    looking for is a set of examples of cases where something like this
    occurs in real texts. I am not expecting this sort of thing to be
    very common. The few people I have asked seem to think that they have
    seen examples of this, but can't remember where. I'll post a summary
    of any results I receive.

    Thanks,

    - jo

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    |                          Josef Meyer                             |
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