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This book investigates the morphosyntactic, semantic, and pragmatic
properties of language, and the interactions between them, from the
perspective of Optimality Theory. It integrates optimization
processes into the formal and functional study of grammar,
interpreting optimization as the result of conflicting, violable
ranked constraints. Unlike previous work on the topic, this book
also takes into account the question of directionality of grammar.
A model of grammar in which optimization processes interact
bidirectionally allows both language generation-the process of
selecting the optimal form of a given meaning-and language
interpretation-the process of optimal interpretation of a given
form-to be taken into account. Chapters in this volume explore the
consequences of both symmetric (unidirectional) and asymmetric
(bidirectional) versions of Optimality Theory, investigating the
syntax-semantics interface, first language acquisition, and
sequential bilingual grammars. The volume presents cutting edge
research in Optimality-Theoretic syntax and semantics, as well as
demonstrating how optimization processes as modelled in this
formalism serve as a viable approach for linguists and scholars in
related fields.
This book investigates the morphosyntactic, semantic, and pragmatic
properties of language, and the interactions between them, from the
perspective of Optimality Theory. It integrates optimization
processes into the formal and functional study of grammar,
interpreting optimization as the result of conflicting, violable
ranked constraints. Unlike previous work on the topic, this book
also takes into account the question of directionality of grammar.
A model of grammar in which optimization processes interact
bidirectionally allows both language generation-the process of
selecting the optimal form of a given meaning-and language
interpretation-the process of optimal interpretation of a given
form-to be taken into account. Chapters in this volume explore the
consequences of both symmetric (unidirectional) and asymmetric
(bidirectional) versions of Optimality Theory, investigating the
syntax-semantics interface, first language acquisition, and
sequential bilingual grammars. The volume presents cutting edge
research in Optimality-Theoretic syntax and semantics, as well as
demonstrating how optimization processes as modelled in this
formalism serve as a viable approach for linguists and scholars in
related fields.
Despite their apparently divergent accounts of higher cognition,
cognitive theories based on neural computation and those employing
symbolic computation can in fact strengthen one another. To
substantiate this controversial claim, this landmark work develops
in depth a cognitive architecture based in neural computation but
supporting formally explicit higher-level symbolic descriptions,
including new grammar formalisms. Detailed studies in both
phonology and syntax provide arguments that these grammatical
theories and their neural network realizations enable deeper
explanations of early acquisition, processing difficulty,
cross-linguistic typology, and the possibility of genomically
encoding universal principles of grammar. Foundational questions
concerning the explanatory status of symbols for central problems
such as the unbounded productivity of higher cognition are also
given proper treatment. The work is made accessible to scholars in
different fields of cognitive science through tutorial chapters and
numerous expository boxes providing background material from
several disciplines. Examples common to different chapters
facilitate the transition from more basic to more sophisticated
treatments. Details of method, formalism, and foundation are
presented in later chapters, offering a wealth of new results to
specialists in psycholinguistics, language acquisition, theoretical
linguistics, computational linguistics, computational neuroscience,
connectionist modeling, and philosophy of mind.
Despite their apparently divergent accounts of higher cognition,
cognitive theories based on neural computation and those employing
symbolic computation can in fact strengthen one another. To
substantiate this controversial claim, this landmark work develops
in depth a cognitive architecture based in neural computation but
supporting formally explicit higher-level symbolic descriptions,
including new grammar formalisms. Detailed studies in both
phonology and syntax provide arguments that these grammatical
theories and their neural network realizations enable deeper
explanations of early acquisition, processing difficulty,
cross-linguistic typology, and the possibility of genomically
encoding universal principles of grammar. Foundational questions
concerning the explanatory status of symbols for central problems
such as the unbounded productivity of higher cognition are also
given proper treatment. The work is made accessible to scholars in
different fields of cognitive science through tutorial chapters and
numerous expository boxes providing background material from
several disciplines. Examples common to different chapters
facilitate the transition from more basic to more sophisticated
treatments. Details of method, formalism, and foundation are
presented in later chapters, offering a wealth of new results to
specialists in psycholinguistics, language acquisition, theoretical
linguistics, computational linguistics, computational neuroscience,
connectionist modeling, and philosophy of mind.
The main goal of this study, first published in 1994, is to present
a substantial part of the grammar of French. This goal is achieved
by bringing together two aspects of syntactic investigation. First,
the study focuses on a vast range of French clausal phenomena,
including Object Raising constructions, Causative constructions of
various types, Impersonal constructions, amongst many others.
Second, the investigation is conducted within the framework of
Relational Grammar. This title will be of interest to students of
language and linguistics.
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