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The Development of Language Processing Strategies - A Cross-linguistic Study Between Japanese and English (Hardcover)
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The Development of Language Processing Strategies - A Cross-linguistic Study Between Japanese and English (Hardcover)
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Ever since the notion of explanatory adequacy was promoted by
Chomsky in his 1965 Aspects, linguists and psycholinguists have
been in pursuit of a psychologically valid theory of grammar. To be
explanatorily adequate, a theory of grammar can not only describe
the general characteristics of a language but can also account for
the underlying psychological processes of acquiring and processing
that language. To be considered psychologically valid, a grammar
must be learnable by ordinary children (the problem of acquisition)
and must generate sentences that are parsable by ordinary people
(the problem of processing). Ultimately, the fields of language
acquisition and processing are concerned with the same goal: to
build a theory that accounts for grammar as it is acquired by
children; accessed in comprehension and production of speech; and
represented within the human mind. Unfortunately, these two fields
developed independently and have rarely been well-informed about
each other's concerns. Both have experienced past difficulties as a
result.
Recently, new models have been developed with full consideration
to cross-linguistic diversity. Gone are many of the basic
assumptions of conventional models, and in their place a variety of
innovative and more flexible assumptions have emerged. However, in
their attempt to address cross-linguistic issues, these processing
models have yet to fully address the developmental challenge: How
can a child without a stable grammar process language and still
manage to acquire new grammar?
This book attempts to develop a model of language processing that
addresses both cross-linguistic and developmental challenges. It
proposes to link the setting of a basic configurational parameter
during language acquisition to the different organization of
processing strategies in left- and right-branching languages. Based
primarily on Mazuka's doctoral dissertation, this volume
incorporates various responses to the original proposal as well as
the author's responses to the comments.
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