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Head-driven phrase structure grammar

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TLDR
This book presents the most complete exposition of the theory of head-driven phrase structure grammar, introduced in the authors' "Information-Based Syntax and Semantics," and demonstrates the applicability of the HPSG approach to a wide range of empirical problems.
Abstract
This book presents the most complete exposition of the theory of head-driven phrase structure grammar (HPSG), introduced in the authors' "Information-Based Syntax and Semantics." HPSG provides an integration of key ideas from the various disciplines of cognitive science, drawing on results from diverse approaches to syntactic theory, situation semantics, data type theory, and knowledge representation. The result is a conception of grammar as a set of declarative and order-independent constraints, a conception well suited to modelling human language processing. This self-contained volume demonstrates the applicability of the HPSG approach to a wide range of empirical problems, including a number which have occupied center-stage within syntactic theory for well over twenty years: the control of "understood" subjects, long-distance dependencies conventionally treated in terms of "wh"-movement, and syntactic constraints on the relationship between various kinds of pronouns and their antecedents. The authors make clear how their approach compares with and improves upon approaches undertaken in other frameworks, including in particular the government-binding theory of Noam Chomsky.

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The processing of extraposed structures in English.

TL;DR: The results demonstrate that comprehenders maintain probabilistic syntactic expectations that persist beyond projective-dependency structures, and suggest that it may be possible to explain observed patterns of comprehension difficulty associated with extraposition entirely through Probabilistic expectations.
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The Italian Left Periphery: A View from Locality

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the interaction of locality phenomena with the left periphery in Italian as elaborated in Rizzi 1997, 2001a, 2004b, and show that long-distance crossing possibilities fully predict the local orderings entailed by the left-peripheral template.
Journal ArticleDOI

Generative linguistics and neural networks at 60: Foundation, friction, and fusion

Joe Pater
- 01 Jan 2019 - 
TL;DR: The authors traces the development of these two approaches to cognitive science, from their largely autonomous early development in the first thirty years, through their collision in the 1980s around the past-tense debate (Rumelhart & McClelland 1986, Pinker & Prince 1988) and their integration in much subsequent work up to the present.

Rapid Prototyping of Scalable Grammars: Towards Modularity in Extensions to a Language-Independent Core

TL;DR: A new way to simplify the construction of precise broad-coverage grammars, employing typologicallymotivated, customizable extensions to a language-independent core grammar, and each ‘module’ represents a salient dimension of cross-linguistic variation.
Reference EntryDOI

Relating structure and time in linguistics and psycholinguistics

TL;DR: This commentary focuses on issues in the representation of unbounded syntactic dependencies, as a case study of what psycholinguistic methods can and cannot tell us about linguistic questions, and vice versa.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Mental representation of grammatical relations

Joan Bresnan
- 01 Dec 1985 - 
TL;DR: In this article, twelve articles are grouped into three sections, as follows: "I. Syntactic Representation: " Lexical-Functional Grammar: A Formal Theory for Grammatical Representation (R. Kaplan and J. Bresnan); Control and Complementation (J.Bresnan).
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Generalized Phrase Structure Grammar

TL;DR: "Generalized Phrase Structure Grammar" provides the definitive exposition of the theory of grammar originally proposed by Gerald Gazdar and developed during half a dozen years' work with his colleagues Ewan Klein, Geoffrey Pullum, and Ivan Sag.
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An introduction to unification-based approaches to grammar

TL;DR: This book surveys the important concept of unification as it relates to linguistic theory and, in particular, to Functional Unification Grammar, Definite-Clause Grammars, Lexical- functions, and Generalized Phrase Struture Grammar.
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The logic of typed feature structures

TL;DR: The Logic of Typed Feature Structures as discussed by the authors is a monograph that brings all the main theoretical ideas into one place where they can be related and compared in a unified setting.