<p>The renaissance of corpus linguistics and promising developments in experimental linguistic techniques in recent years have led to a remarkable revival of interest in issues of the empirical base of linguistic theory in general, and the status of different kinds of linguistic evidence in particul
Linguistic Evidence: Empirical, Theoretical and Computational Perspectives
β Scribed by Stephan Kepser, Marga Reis
- Publisher
- Mouton de Gruyter
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 592
- Series
- Studies in Generative Grammar 85
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The renaissance of corpus linguistics and promising developments in experimental linguistic techniques in recent years have led to a remarkable revival of interest in issues of the empirical base of linguistic theory in general, and the status of different kinds of linguistic evidence in particular. Consensus is growing (a) that even so-called primary data (from introspection as well as authentic language production) are inherently complex performance data only indirectly reflecting the subject of linguistic theory, (b) that for an appropriate foundation of linguistic theories evidence from different sources such as introspective data, corpus data, data from (psycho-)linguistic experiments, historical and diachronic data, typological data, neurolinguistic data and language learning data are not only welcome but also often necessary. It is in particular by contrasting evidence from different sources with respect to particular research questions that we may gain a deeper understanding of the status and quality of the individual types of linguistic evidence on the one hand, and of their mutual relationship and respective weight on the other. The present volume is a collection of (selected) papers presented at the conference on 'Linguistic Evidence' in TΓΌbingen 2004, which was explicitly devoted to the above issues. All of them address these issues in relation to specific linguistic research problems, thereby helping to establish a better understanding of the nature of linguistic evidence in particularly insightful ways.
β¦ Table of Contents
Contents......Page 5
Evidence in Linguistics......Page 9
Gradedness and Consistency in Grammaticality Judgments......Page 15
Null Subjects and Verb Placement in Old High German......Page 35
Beauty and the Beast: What Running a Broad-Coverage Precision Grammar over the BNC Taught Us about the Grammar β and the Corpus......Page 57
Seemingly Indefinite Definites......Page 79
Animacy as a Driving Cue in Change and Acquisition in Brazilian Portuguese......Page 95
Aspectual Coercion and On-line Processing: The Case of Iteration......Page 113
Why Do Children Fail to UnderstandWeak Epistemic Terms? An Experimental Study......Page 131
Processing Negative Polarity Items: When Negation Comes Through the Backdoor......Page 153
Linguistic Constraints on the Acquisition of Epistemic Modal Verbs......Page 172
The Decathlon Model of Empirical Syntax......Page 195
Examining the Constraints on the Benefactive Alternation by Using the World Wide Web as a Corpus......Page 217
A Quantitative Corpus Study of German Word Order Variation......Page 249
Which Statistics Reflect Semantics? Rethinking Synonymy and Word Similarity......Page 273
Language Production Errors as Evidence for Language Production Processes β The Frankfurt Corpora......Page 292
A Multi-Evidence Study of European and Brazilian Portuguese wh-Questions......Page 315
The Relationship between Grammaticality Ratings and Corpus Frequencies: A Case Study into Word Order Variability in the Midfield of German Clauses......Page 337
The Emergence of Productive Non-Medical -itis: Corpus Evidence and Qualitative Analysis......Page 359
Experimental Data vs. Diachronic Typological Data: Two Types of Evidence for Linguistic Relativity......Page 379
Reflexives and Pronouns in Picture Noun Phrases: Using Eye Movements as a Source of Linguistic Evidence......Page 401
The Plural is Semantically Unmarked......Page 421
Coherence β an Experimental Approach......Page 443
Thinking About What We Are Asking Speakers to Do......Page 464
A Prosodic Factor for the Decline of Topicalisation in English......Page 493
On the Syntax of DP Coordination: Combining Evidence from Reading-Time Studies and Agrammatic Comprehension......Page 514
Lexical Statistics and Lexical Processing: Semantic Density, Information Complexity, Sex, and Irregularity in Dutch......Page 537
The Double Competence Hypothesis On Diachronic Evidence......Page 565
List of Contributors......Page 585
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