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Book ChapterDOI

Remarks on the Architecture of Language Processing Systems

TLDR
The chapter analyzes the argument that the various conflicts between empirical findings require a resolution in terms of a filtering model, and sketches the outline of such a proposal.
Abstract
Publisher Summary This chapter reviews the remarks on the architecture of language processing systems. The chapter highlights some of the recurrent conflicts among experimental outcomes that rely on behavioral indices of parsing. These controversies can be understood in terms of two additional data classes: a recent series of eye-movement studies that supports strong interactive claims on re parsing and an equally recent series of event related potential (ERP) studies that supports modular systems. The chapter analyzes the argument that the various conflicts between empirical findings require a resolution in terms of a filtering model, and sketches the outline of such a proposal. The essential feature of the resolution relies on using the language production system as the source of the apparent conceptual and discourse level constraints on parsing. Any general evaluation of the architecture of language processing systems must address not only the character of language comprehension, but also that of language generation. Language production models must account for the real-time integration of utterance form—in the service of the specific force—of the meaning that a speaker wishes to convey on a given occasion of utterance.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Theory of Event Coding (TEC): a framework for perception and action planning.

TL;DR: A new framework for a more adequate theoretical treatment of perception and action planning is proposed, in which perceptual contents and action plans are coded in a common representational medium by feature codes with distal reference, showing that the main assumptions are well supported by the data.
Journal ArticleDOI

An integrated theory of language production and comprehension

TL;DR: It is asserted that producing and understanding are interwoven, and that this interweaving is what enables people to predict themselves and each other.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anticipating upcoming words in discourse: Evidence from ERPs and reading times

TL;DR: Findings suggest that people can indeed predict upcoming words in fluent discourse and, moreover, that these predicted words can immediately begin to participate in incremental parsing operations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neural mechanisms of language comprehension: challenges to syntax.

TL;DR: This paper provides a comprehensive review of the recent studies that have demonstrated P600s to semantic violations in light of several proposed triggers, and suggests that normal language comprehension proceeds along at least two competing neural processing streams: a semantic memory-based mechanism, and a combinatorial mechanism that assigns structure to a sentence primarily on the basis of morphosyntactic rules, but also on the based of certain semantic-thematic constraints.
Journal ArticleDOI

The misinterpretation of noncanonical sentences

TL;DR: The results of the three experiments suggest that a comprehensive theory of language comprehension must assume that simple processing heuristics are used during processing in addition to (and perhaps sometimes instead of) syntactic algorithms.
References
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Book

Modularity of mind

Book

Speaking: From Intention to Articulation

TL;DR: In this article, Willem "Pim" Levelt, Director of the Max-Planck Institute for Psycholinguistik, accomplishes the formidable task of covering the entire process of speech production from constraints on conversational appropriateness to articulation and self-monitoring of speech.
Journal ArticleDOI

The modularity of mind

Journal ArticleDOI

A theory of lexical access in speech production.

TL;DR: The model can handle some of the main observations in the domain of speech errors (the major empirical domain for most other theories of lexical access), and the theory opens new ways of approaching the cerebral organization of speech production by way of high-temporal-resolution imaging.