Documentation

Linglib.Phenomena.Negation.Studies.StankovaSimik2024

Staňková & Šimík (2024): Negation in Czech Polar Questions #

@cite{stakov-imk-2024} @cite{gartner-gyuris-2017}

Experimental data from three naturalness judgment experiments on negation in Czech polar questions (Staňková & Šimík, FASL 32 / JSL 33).

Main experiment (§5) #

2×2×2 within-subjects design manipulating:

75 native Czech speakers, Likert 1–7, 32 items (4 per condition).

Key findings #

  1. FALSUM is preferred in V1 (interrogative) PQs — PPIs preferred over NCIs
  2. Declarative word order (nonV1) is preferred in negatively biased contexts
  3. Czech FALSUM is compatible with any type of evidential bias (positive, negative, neutral) — broader than English
  4. The particle náhodou is licensed by FALSUM — PPIs preferred (§6.1)
  5. The particle copak requires contextual evidence — biased contexts preferred (§6.2)

A Cumulative Link Mixed Model (CLMM) regression result. z-values stored as Int × 1000 for precision without Float.

  • name : String

    Human-readable effect name

  • z1000 :

    z-value × 1000 (e.g., -15674 = z = -15.674)

  • significant : Bool

    Whether the effect is statistically significant

  • pThreshold : String

    p-value threshold (as string for display)

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      Whether a CLMM effect's z-value is positive (higher ratings in the first level of the factor).

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        Whether a CLMM effect's z-value is negative.

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          V1: Main effect of INDEFINITE (NCI < PPI). PPIs (nějaký) are significantly more natural than NCIs (žádný) in V1 PQs. z = −15.674, p < .001.

          Interpretation: V1 negation is interpreted as FALSUM (outer negation), which licenses PPIs but blocks NCIs.

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            V1: Main effect of CONTEXT (not significant). z = −1.374, p = 0.169.

            Interpretation: FALSUM/outer negation is insensitive to contextual evidence — V1 PQs are equally natural in negative and neutral contexts. This is because FALSUM conveys epistemic bias (speaker's possibility assessment), not evidential bias.

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              V1: CONTEXT × INDEFINITE interaction. z = 2.933, p < 0.01.

              Post-hoc: the effect of INDEFINITE is more pronounced in neutral contexts. Simple effect of CONTEXT within PPI: z = −3.522, p < .001. Simple effect of CONTEXT within NCI: z = 1.104, p = .27 (n.s.).

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                Post-hoc: V1, simple effect of CONTEXT within PPI level. z = −3.522, p < .001. PPI V1 PQs are more natural in neutral context.

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                  Post-hoc: V1, simple effect of CONTEXT within NCI level. z = 1.104, p = .27 (not significant).

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                    nonV1: Main effect of CONTEXT. Negative contexts rated significantly more natural than neutral contexts. z = 8.674, p < 0.01.

                    Interpretation: nonV1 (declarative) PQs are sensitive to evidential bias and preferred in negatively biased contexts.

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                      nonV1: Main effect of INDEFINITE (NCI > PPI). NCIs (žádný) rated higher than PPIs (nějaký) in nonV1 PQs. z = 6.208, p < 0.01.

                      Interpretation: inner negation (Op¬) is the preferred reading for nonV1, licensing NCIs.

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                        V1 PQs: No effect of context → FALSUM is insensitive to evidential bias.

                        The key asymmetry: V1 is CONTEXT-insensitive (FALSUM = epistemic bias), nonV1 is CONTEXT-sensitive (inner neg = evidential bias).

                        This matches Staňková (2026)'s claim that inner negation requires contextual evidence while outer negation (FALSUM) does not, and confirms the VerbPosition.requiresContextualEvidence classification.

                        Czech FALSUM with positive evidential bias.

                        In a subexperiment, V1 PQs were tested in contexts with positive evidence for p (e.g., Eva winning first place → "Didn't Eva win a prize?"). Median rating = 6 (biased) vs 5 (neutral), Likert 1–7.

                        This confirms Czech outer negation (FALSUM) is compatible with positive evidential bias, unlike English HiNQs.

                        • medianBiased :

                          Median rating in positively biased context

                        • medianNeutral :

                          Median rating in neutral context

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                          Czech FALSUM compatible with all three evidence types (positive, negative, neutral). This matches the broad distribution of InterNPQ in Šimík's bias profile table.

                          náhodou subexperiment: 2×2 design (Context × Indefinite). All V1 PQs with náhodou. 8 items.

                          Tests whether náhodou requires FALSUM (outer negation). If so, PPIs (nějaký) should be preferred over NCIs (žádný), because FALSUM licenses PPIs but not NCIs.

                          náhodou: Main effect of INDEFINITE (NCI < PPI). PPIs strongly preferred with náhodou. z = −12.845, p < .001.

                          Interpretation: náhodou requires FALSUM, which only licenses PPIs. "based on this we suggest that náhodou could be used as an overt indicator of the covert FALSUM operator" (S&Š §6.1).

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                            náhodou's INDEFINITE effect is in the same direction as V1's, confirming both involve FALSUM (outer negation).

                            copak subexperiment: 2×2 design (Context × PQ Polarity).

                            For positive PQs: biased context has evidence for ¬p, speaker believed p. For negative PQs: biased context has evidence for p, speaker believed ¬p. In both cases, copak expresses surprise at the evidence conflicting with the speaker's prior belief.

                            copak: Main effect of CONTEXT. Biased contexts significantly more natural than neutral. z = 9.372, p < .001.

                            Interpretation: copak requires a conflict between speaker's prior belief and current contextual evidence (evidential bias). "copak is a particle which is used to express speaker's surprise about the current contextual evidence" (S&Š §6.2).

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                              náhodou vs copak: opposite context sensitivity.

                              • náhodou (FALSUM-tied): context-insensitive. FALSUM conveys epistemic bias regardless of contextual evidence — V1 PQs are equally natural in any evidential context.
                              • copak (evidential-bias-tied): context-sensitive. Requires a biased context where speaker's prior belief conflicts with evidence.

                              This confirms they express different types of bias: náhodou → epistemic bias; copak → evidential bias. (Staňková & Šimík 2024 §6)

                              The V1 context insensitivity and náhodou's FALSUM requirement converge: both reflect that outer negation (FALSUM) is an epistemic-bias phenomenon, not an evidential-bias phenomenon. Conversely, nonV1 context sensitivity and copak's context requirement both reflect evidential bias sensitivity.

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