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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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The Lexical Basis of Sentence Processing

Formal, computational and experimental issues

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Edited by Paola Merlo and Suzanne Stevenson
University of Geneva / University of Toronto

2002. viii, 363 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 4987 6 / EUR 120.00
978 1 58811 156 2 / USD 180.00
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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9748 8 / EUR 120.00 / USD 180.00
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Lexical effects on language processing are currently a major focus of attention in studies of sentence comprehension. This thematic collection provides a uniquely multi-faceted and integrated viewpoint on key aspects of lexicalist theories, drawing from the fields of theoretical linguistics, computational linguistics, and psycholinguistics. The focus of this stimulating volume is on a number of central topics: The discussion of foundational issues concerning the nature of the lexicon and its relationship to sentence understanding; the exploration of the relationship between syntactic and lexical processing; and the investigation of the specific content of lexical entries, especially for verbs. The authors draw on a range of methodologies, from computational modeling to corpus studies to behavioral and neuro-imaging experimental techniques. The breadth of topics and methodologies is brought together by the articulated, critical analysis of the field provided in the introduction. The research reported here elaborates both the structure and the probabilistic content of lexical representations, and meets up with work in computer science, linguistics, psychology, and philosophy on the relation between conceptual, grammatical, and statistical knowledge.


Table of contents

Preface
vii
Words, numbers and all that: The lexicon in sentence understanding
Suzanne Stevenson and Paola Merlo
1–38
The lexicon in Optimality Theory
Joan Bresnan
39–58
Optimality–theoretic Lexical Functional Grammar
Mark Johnson
59–73
The lexicon and the laundromat
Jerry Fodor
75–84
Semantics in the spin cycle: Competence and performance criteria for the creation of lexical entries
Amy Weinberg
85–93
Connectionist and symbolist sentence processing
Mark Steedman
95–108
A computational model of the grammatical aspects of word recognition as supertagging
Albert E. Kim, Bangalore Srinivas and John C. Trueswell
109–135
Incrementality and lexicalism: A treebank study
Vincenzo Lombardo and Patrick Sturt
137–155
Modular architectures and statistical mechanisms: The case from lexical category disambiguation
Matt Crocker and Steffan Corley
157–180
Encoding and storage in working memory during sentence comprehension
Laurie A. Stowe, Rienk G. Withaar, Albertus A. Wijers, Cees A.J. Broere and Anne M.J. Paans
181–205
The time course of information integration in sentence processing
Michael J. Spivey, Stanka A. Fitneva, Whitney Tabor and Sameer Ajmani
207–232
The lexical source of unexpressed participants and their role in sentence and discourse understanding
Gail Mauner, Jean-Pierre Koenig, Alissa Melinger and Breton Bienvenue
233–254
Reduced relatives judged hard require constraint-based analyses
Hana Filip, Michael K. Tanenhaus, Greg N. Carlson, Paul D. Allopenna and Joshua Blatt
255–279
Predicting thematic role assignments in context
Gerry T.M. Altmann
281–302
Lexical semantics as a basis for argument structure frequency biases
Vera Argamann and Neal J. Pearlmutter
303–324
Verb sense and verb subcategorization probabilities
Doug Roland and Daniel Jurafsky
325–345
Author index
347–353
Item index
355–362


In general this is a fantastic discussion of issues in sentence processing such as: what is the relationship between the lexicon and syntax: does one constitute part of the other; are they separate processes; and what information does the lexicon contain.
Carrie Ankerstein, University of Sheffield on Linguist List Vol-13-3392, 2002

This book is an excellent resource for researchers interested in human language processing, and the computational linguist interested in the connection between probabilistic parsing and human sentence processing will find a number of papers satisfying.
Shravan Vassishth, University of Saarland, in Computational Linguistics Vol.30:4, 2004