| 英文摘要 |
No phonetic clues exist for singular pronouns in spoken Chinese. During comprehension for pronoun resolution, nonverbal structural external information is a key cue for pronoun resolution. Two experiments were conducted to explore the effects of co-speech gestures and doll cues on the pronoun resolution of a group of 4- and 5-year-old Chinese speaking children. In each experiment, children watched videos of short stories and were asked pronoun resolution–related questions at the end of each story. In experiment 1 (seventy-eight 4- or 5-year-old children), ambiguous pronoun resolution was reported. The 5-year-old children exhibited first-mention biases when co-speech gestures were used, whereas the 4-year-old children did not do so; however, both age groups exhibited first-mention biases when both co-speech gestures and doll cues were used. In experiment 2 (ninety-seven 4- or 5-year-old children), the identification of subject and object pronouns was observed. Both age groups achieved significantly higher accuracy when both co-speech gestures and doll cues were used. This finding suggests that first-mention biases have a stable effect on ambiguous pronoun resolution in 5-year-old children. In addition, 4- or 5-year-old Chinese-speaking children are more sensitive to co-speech gestures and doll cues than to speech-internal cues. |