Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing
Herausgeber: Clifton, Charles; Pickering, Martin; Crocker, Matthew W.
Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing
Herausgeber: Clifton, Charles; Pickering, Martin; Crocker, Matthew W.
- Gebundenes Buch
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Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 376
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. Dezember 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 760g
- ISBN-13: 9780521631211
- ISBN-10: 0521631211
- Artikelnr.: 21312215
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Contributors; Preface; 1. Architectures and mechanisms in sentence
comprehension Martin J. Pickering, Charles Clifton, Jr., and Matthew W.
Crocker; Part I. Frameworks: 2. Evaluating models of human sentence
processing Charles Clifton, Jr; 3. Specifying architectures for language
processing: process, control, and memory in parsing and interpretation
Richard L. Lewis; 4. Modeling thematic and discourse context effects with a
multiple constraints approach: implications for the architecture of the
language comprehension system Michael K. Tanenhaus, Michael J.
Spivey-Knowlton, and Joy E. Hanna; 5. Late closure in context: some
consequences for parsimony Gerry T. M. Altmann; Part II. Syntactic and
Lexical Mechanisms: 6. The modular statistical hypothesis: exploring
lexical category ambiguity Steffan Corley and Matthew W. Crocker; 7.
Lexical syntax and parsing architecture Paola Merlo and Suzanne Stevenson;
8. Constituency, context, and connectionism in syntactic parsing James
Henderson; Part III. Syntax and Semantics: 9. On the electrophysiology of
language comprehension: implications for the human language system Colin
Brown and Peter Hagoort; 10. Parsing and incremental understanding during
reading Martin J. Pickering and Matthew J. Traxler; 11. Syntactic
attachment and anaphor resolution: the two sides of relative clause
attachment Barbara Hemforth, Lars Konieczny, and Christoph Scheepers; 12.
Cross-linguistic psycholinguistics Marica De Vincenzi; Part IV.
Interpretation: 13. On interpretation: minimal 'lowering' Lyn Frazier; 14.
Focus effects associated with negative quantifiers Linda M. Moxey and
Anthony J. Sanford; 15. Constraints and mechanisms in theories of anaphor
processing Amit Almor; Author index; Subject index.
comprehension Martin J. Pickering, Charles Clifton, Jr., and Matthew W.
Crocker; Part I. Frameworks: 2. Evaluating models of human sentence
processing Charles Clifton, Jr; 3. Specifying architectures for language
processing: process, control, and memory in parsing and interpretation
Richard L. Lewis; 4. Modeling thematic and discourse context effects with a
multiple constraints approach: implications for the architecture of the
language comprehension system Michael K. Tanenhaus, Michael J.
Spivey-Knowlton, and Joy E. Hanna; 5. Late closure in context: some
consequences for parsimony Gerry T. M. Altmann; Part II. Syntactic and
Lexical Mechanisms: 6. The modular statistical hypothesis: exploring
lexical category ambiguity Steffan Corley and Matthew W. Crocker; 7.
Lexical syntax and parsing architecture Paola Merlo and Suzanne Stevenson;
8. Constituency, context, and connectionism in syntactic parsing James
Henderson; Part III. Syntax and Semantics: 9. On the electrophysiology of
language comprehension: implications for the human language system Colin
Brown and Peter Hagoort; 10. Parsing and incremental understanding during
reading Martin J. Pickering and Matthew J. Traxler; 11. Syntactic
attachment and anaphor resolution: the two sides of relative clause
attachment Barbara Hemforth, Lars Konieczny, and Christoph Scheepers; 12.
Cross-linguistic psycholinguistics Marica De Vincenzi; Part IV.
Interpretation: 13. On interpretation: minimal 'lowering' Lyn Frazier; 14.
Focus effects associated with negative quantifiers Linda M. Moxey and
Anthony J. Sanford; 15. Constraints and mechanisms in theories of anaphor
processing Amit Almor; Author index; Subject index.
Contributors; Preface; 1. Architectures and mechanisms in sentence
comprehension Martin J. Pickering, Charles Clifton, Jr., and Matthew W.
Crocker; Part I. Frameworks: 2. Evaluating models of human sentence
processing Charles Clifton, Jr; 3. Specifying architectures for language
processing: process, control, and memory in parsing and interpretation
Richard L. Lewis; 4. Modeling thematic and discourse context effects with a
multiple constraints approach: implications for the architecture of the
language comprehension system Michael K. Tanenhaus, Michael J.
Spivey-Knowlton, and Joy E. Hanna; 5. Late closure in context: some
consequences for parsimony Gerry T. M. Altmann; Part II. Syntactic and
Lexical Mechanisms: 6. The modular statistical hypothesis: exploring
lexical category ambiguity Steffan Corley and Matthew W. Crocker; 7.
Lexical syntax and parsing architecture Paola Merlo and Suzanne Stevenson;
8. Constituency, context, and connectionism in syntactic parsing James
Henderson; Part III. Syntax and Semantics: 9. On the electrophysiology of
language comprehension: implications for the human language system Colin
Brown and Peter Hagoort; 10. Parsing and incremental understanding during
reading Martin J. Pickering and Matthew J. Traxler; 11. Syntactic
attachment and anaphor resolution: the two sides of relative clause
attachment Barbara Hemforth, Lars Konieczny, and Christoph Scheepers; 12.
Cross-linguistic psycholinguistics Marica De Vincenzi; Part IV.
Interpretation: 13. On interpretation: minimal 'lowering' Lyn Frazier; 14.
Focus effects associated with negative quantifiers Linda M. Moxey and
Anthony J. Sanford; 15. Constraints and mechanisms in theories of anaphor
processing Amit Almor; Author index; Subject index.
comprehension Martin J. Pickering, Charles Clifton, Jr., and Matthew W.
Crocker; Part I. Frameworks: 2. Evaluating models of human sentence
processing Charles Clifton, Jr; 3. Specifying architectures for language
processing: process, control, and memory in parsing and interpretation
Richard L. Lewis; 4. Modeling thematic and discourse context effects with a
multiple constraints approach: implications for the architecture of the
language comprehension system Michael K. Tanenhaus, Michael J.
Spivey-Knowlton, and Joy E. Hanna; 5. Late closure in context: some
consequences for parsimony Gerry T. M. Altmann; Part II. Syntactic and
Lexical Mechanisms: 6. The modular statistical hypothesis: exploring
lexical category ambiguity Steffan Corley and Matthew W. Crocker; 7.
Lexical syntax and parsing architecture Paola Merlo and Suzanne Stevenson;
8. Constituency, context, and connectionism in syntactic parsing James
Henderson; Part III. Syntax and Semantics: 9. On the electrophysiology of
language comprehension: implications for the human language system Colin
Brown and Peter Hagoort; 10. Parsing and incremental understanding during
reading Martin J. Pickering and Matthew J. Traxler; 11. Syntactic
attachment and anaphor resolution: the two sides of relative clause
attachment Barbara Hemforth, Lars Konieczny, and Christoph Scheepers; 12.
Cross-linguistic psycholinguistics Marica De Vincenzi; Part IV.
Interpretation: 13. On interpretation: minimal 'lowering' Lyn Frazier; 14.
Focus effects associated with negative quantifiers Linda M. Moxey and
Anthony J. Sanford; 15. Constraints and mechanisms in theories of anaphor
processing Amit Almor; Author index; Subject index.