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Traditionally, computation - the rule-driven manipulation of
symbols - as opposed to (lexical) storage, has been the main focus
of research in the language faculty. There is, however, increasing
evidence of a prominent role of storage. Constructions that could
be computed not necessarily always are. In this volume, the
relative roles of computation and storage are discussed, both
theoretically and on the basis of linguistic, psycholinguistic, and
brain-imaging evidence, with respect to a wide range of language
phenomena, such as morphological processing, syntactic processing,
limitations of parsing mechanisms, neural substrates of short-term
storage versus computation, and the processing of discourse. Each
chapter has been written by one or more outstanding experts in the
field. The contributions are thorough, but at the same time free
from unnecessary technical detail, so that the volume is accessible
to experienced readers as well as students in linguistics,
psychology, and other cognitive sciences.
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