|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
The present volume contributes to the growing body of work on
sentence pro- cessing. The goal of work in this area is to
construct a theory of human sen- tence processing in general, i.e.,
given a grammar of some particular language and a general
characterization of the human sentence processing mechanisms, the
particular processing system for that language should follows
automati- cally. At least that's the goal. What is needed in order
to pursue this goal is systematic in-depth analysis of the sentence
routines of individual languages. With respect to German, that is
precisely what the present volume delivers. In sharp contrast to a
decade ago, the study of German sentence process- ing is
flourishing today. Four lively and active centers have emerged. The
University of Freiburg is one prominent center, represented in the
present vol- ume by the editors Barbara Hemforth and Lars Konieczny
(who was at Freiburg for many years) as well as by Christoph
Scheepers (who is now in Glasgow) and Christoph Holscher. The
University of Potsdam has recently begun an interdisciplinary
collaboration on sentence processing involving Matthias
Schlesewsky, Gisbert Fanselow, Reinhold Kliegl and Josef Krems. The
University of Jena has several investigators trained in linguistics
and interested in language processing. That group is represented
here by Markus Bader and also includes his colleagues Michael Meng
and Josef Bayer.
The present volume contributes to the growing body of work on
sentence pro- cessing. The goal of work in this area is to
construct a theory of human sen- tence processing in general, i.e.,
given a grammar of some particular language and a general
characterization of the human sentence processing mechanisms, the
particular processing system for that language should follows
automati- cally. At least that's the goal. What is needed in order
to pursue this goal is systematic in-depth analysis of the sentence
routines of individual languages. With respect to German, that is
precisely what the present volume delivers. In sharp contrast to a
decade ago, the study of German sentence process- ing is
flourishing today. Four lively and active centers have emerged. The
University of Freiburg is one prominent center, represented in the
present vol- ume by the editors Barbara Hemforth and Lars Konieczny
(who was at Freiburg for many years) as well as by Christoph
Scheepers (who is now in Glasgow) and Christoph Holscher. The
University of Potsdam has recently begun an interdisciplinary
collaboration on sentence processing involving Matthias
Schlesewsky, Gisbert Fanselow, Reinhold Kliegl and Josef Krems. The
University of Jena has several investigators trained in linguistics
and interested in language processing. That group is represented
here by Markus Bader and also includes his colleagues Michael Meng
and Josef Bayer.
|
You may like...
Tenet
John David Washington, Robert Pattinson
Blu-ray disc
(1)
R50
Discovery Miles 500
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.