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12 - Sentence comprehension and syntactic parsing

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 January 2010

John C. L. Ingram
Affiliation:
University of Queensland
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Summary

Introduction

In this chapter we discuss the role of syntactic processing in sentence comprehension. As elsewhere in this book, we will approach this question from a dual perspective. Firstly, we shall examine the sentence comprehension strategies of people who, as a result of brain injury, appear to have lost their facility to utilize the grammatical rules of their language, and suffer a condition known as agrammatism. This is roughly equivalent to posing the (perhaps somewhat naive) question: if one loses one's syntax, what are the consequences for sentence comprehension? In exploring this question, we shall review the first generation of psycholinguistic investigations into a core topic of aphasia research and set the stage for contemporary inquiries employing sophisticated on-line behavioural and neuroimaging techniques.

The second major theme of the present chapter concerns the processing of syntactically ambiguous and ‘garden path’ sentences by perfectly fluent native listeners. Sentences which can be syntactically read or ‘parsed’ more than one way, or which initially lead us ‘up the garden path’ towards a misconstrual that we are subsequently forced to re-analyse, have the potential to tell us much about how the human parser works. We shall introduce both of these major themes of the aphasic and psycholinguistic literature informally in this chapter, through appeal to your linguistic intuitions as native speakers of English, leaving it to the subsequent chapter to deal with methodological issues of ‘on-line’ processing and how we might infer the mental and neural operations that take place in apparent real time when we understand spoken language.

Type
Chapter
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Neurolinguistics
An Introduction to Spoken Language Processing and its Disorders
, pp. 243 - 265
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2007

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