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E-grāmata: Reanalysis in Sentence Processing

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The topic addressed in this volume lies within the study of sentence processing, which is one of the major divisions of psycholinguistics. The goal has been to understand the structure and functioning of the mental mechanisms involved in sentence comprehension. Most of the experimental and theoretical work during the last twenty or thirty years has focused on 'first-pass parsing', the process of assigning structure to a sentence as its words are encountered, one at a time, 'from left to right' . One important guiding idea has been to delineate the processing mechanisms by studying where they fai!. For this purpose we identify types of sentences which perceivers have trouble assigning structure to. An important class of perceptually difficult senten ces are those which contain temporary ambiguities. Since the parsing mechanism cannot tell what the intended structure is, it may make an incorrect guess. Then later on in the sentence, the structure assignment process breaks down, because the later words do not fit with the incorrect structural analysis. This is called a 'garden path' situation. When it occurs, the parsing mechanism must somehow correct itself, and find a different analysis which is compatible with the incoming words. This reanalysis process is the subject of the research reported here.

Papildus informācija

Springer Book Archives
List of Contributors
ix
Preface xi
1 Prosodic influences on reading syntactically ambiguous sentences
1(46)
Markus Bader
1 Introduction
2 Phonological coding and syntactic ambiguity resolution
3 Focus particles and syntactic ambiguity
4 Experiment 1
5 Experiment 2
6 Experiment 3
7 General discussion
2 Reanalysis aspects of movements
47(26)
Marica De Vincenzi
1 Introduction
2 Differences between types of wh-dependencies
3 The Italian processing data
4 Conclusions from the Italian experiments
5 Some evidence on processing wh-questions in English
6 Conclusions
3 Syntactic reanalysis, thematic processing, and sentence comprehension
73(28)
Fernanda Ferreira
John M. Henderson
1 Introduction
2 General issues of reanalysis
3 Ferreira & Henderson's (1991a, 1991b) model of reanalysis
4 Our current model of reanalysis
5 Summary of the new model
4 Attach Anyway
101(42)
Janet Dean Fodor
Atsu Inoue
1 Background
2 Attach Anyway and Adjust
3 The Grammatical Dependency Principle
4 The Thematic Overlay Effect
5 Capture and theft
6 Conclusion
5 Sentence reanalysis, and visibility
143(34)
Lyn Frazier
Charles Clifton, Jr.
1 Introduction
2 Reanalysis cost
3 Reanalysis preferences
4 Visibility
5 Why visibility
6 Conclusions
6 Diagnosis and reanalysis: Two processing aspects the brain may differentiate
177(24)
Angela D. Friederici
1 Introduction
2 The processing view of revision
3 Language processing in ERP
4 Processing subject-first and object-first structures
5 The data
6 The late positivity
7 Conclusion
7 Syntactic analysis and reanalysis in sentence processing
201(46)
Paul Gorrell
1 First pass as prelude
2 Syntax
3 The parser
4 Right Association and Locality
5 Diagnosis and Structural Determinism
6 Summary
8 Reanalysis and limited repair parsing: Leaping off the garden path
247(40)
Richard L. Lewis
1 Introduction
2 Reanalysis as a functional requirement
3 Four theories of reanalysis
4 Limited cue-driven repair
5 Toward a complete theory of garden path effects
6 Conclusion
9 A computational model of recovery
287(40)
Vincenzo Lombardo
1 Introduction
2 The grammar
3 Elementary parsing operations
4 Ambiguity resolution
5 Recovery
6 Discussion and conclusions
Appendix: Hierarchical Dependency Grammar
10 Parsing as incremental restructuring
327(38)
Suzanne Stevenson
1 Introduction
2 Competition and restructuring
3 Modeling reanalysis
4 Discussion
5 Conclusions
11 Generalized monotonicity for reanalysis models
365(36)
Patrick Sturt
Matthew W. Crocker
1 Introduction
2 What is reanalysis?
3 Accounting/or constraints on reanalysis
4 The monotonicity framework
5 A general definition of monotonicity
6 Reflections on the monotonicity framework
7 Concluding remarks
Index 401