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Journal ArticleDOI

Processing Coordinate Structures

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TLDR
It is argued here that the syntactic like-category restriction is not grammatical, implying that parallelism effects are largely limited to the conjuncts of a coordinate structure and not due simply to the repetition of a phrase with a particular shape.
Abstract
Coordination often involves syntactically like categories. Based on the results of four reading time studies, it is argued here that the syntactic like-category restriction is not grammatical. Coordination of unlike categories can be just as acceptable as coordination of like categories. However, syntactically like category coordination is processed faster than coordination of unlike categories even when the two sentence types are judged to be fully acceptable. Further, parallelism of conjuncts facilitates processing regardless of whether it is parallelism in the category of the conjuncts (a property which the grammar might regulate) or parallelism in the internal structure of the conjuncts (a property which the grammar does not regulate, on anyone's view). Parallelism did not facilitate processing when the structure of a subject and object were manipulated, implying that parallelism effects are largely limited to the conjuncts of a coordinate structure and not due simply to the repetition of a phrase with a particular shape.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Structural priming: a critical review.

TL;DR: The potential functions of structural priming are addressed, before turning to its implications for first language acquisition, bilingualism, and aphasia, and the authors close with theoretical and empirical recommendations for future investigations.
Book ChapterDOI

Eye movements in reading words and sentences

TL;DR: This paper found that fixation time on a word is shorter if the reader has a valid preview of the word prior to fixating it, and fixation time is shorter when the word is easy to identify and understand.
Journal ArticleDOI

Priming ditransitive structures in comprehension.

TL;DR: In two experiments, this work investigated whether priming during comprehension occurs in ditransitive sentences similar to those used in production research, and observed no evidence for priming when the verbs were different.
Journal ArticleDOI

Priming Prepositional-Phrase Attachment During Comprehension.

TL;DR: 4 experiments used an expression-picture matching task to investigate whether prior syntactic context affects ambiguity resolution in comprehension and found that participants tended to interpret an ambiguous prepositional phrase in a target expression as highly attached if it contained the same verb as the prime.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Identifying Nocuous Ambiguities in Natural Language Requirements

TL;DR: A novel technique is presented that automatically alerts authors of requirements to the presence of potentially dangerous ambiguities, and heuristics are used, based largely on word distribution information, to automatically replicate these judgements.
References
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Book

Head-driven phrase structure grammar

TL;DR: 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.
Book

Constraints on variables in syntax

TL;DR: This paper is intended to provide a history of modern language pedagogical practices in the United States and its applications in the context of modern linguistics.
Book

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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Syntactic persistence in language production

TL;DR: The authors found that the effects of syntactic priming were specific to features of sentence form, independent of sentence content, and that the empirical isolability of structural features from conceptual characteristics of successive utterances is consistent with the assumption that some syntactic processes are organized into functionally independent subsystem.
Journal ArticleDOI

The independence of syntactic processing

TL;DR: This article found that syntactic processing biases remained even when they resulted in thematically based anomaly or when they conflicted with discourse biases, and argued that the data support the existence of a syntactical processing module.
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