Results from an English acceptability-rating experiment are presented which demonstrate that people!nd doubly nested relative clause structures just as acceptable when only two verb phrases are included instead of the grammatically required three. Furthermore, the experiment shows that such sentences are acceptable only when the intermediate verb phrase is omitted. A number of speci!c accounts of forgetting are considered. Two early proposed theories of this effect, the disappearing syntactic nodes hypothesis (Frazier, 1985) and the least recent nodes hypothesis (Gibson, 1991), are not consistent with the experimental results. The results, together with other acceptability patterns, suggest that the representations that are retained (and su...
Speakers' memory of sentence structure can persist and modulate the syntactic choices of subsequent ...
Results from an experiment with two parts are presented in this paper. In part one, participants lis...
Sentences are easier to remember than ungrammatical strings (see Brener, 1940). There are at least t...
A rationale for indexing the structural complexity of sentences was introduced and an experiment rep...
Five experiments present the first piece of evidence from online processing (self-paced reading and ...
Short-term memory for active and passive sentences at two levels of grammatical complexity was teste...
Research provides evidence of correlations between measures of short-term memory (STM) and language ...
The effects on sentence, phrase, and pivotal word recall of variations in mean depth, type, and leng...
Sentences with doubly center-embedded relative clauses in which a verb phrase (VP) is missing are so...
Seven experiments using self-paced reading and eyetracking suggest that omitting the middle verb in ...
Smith (1981) found that concrete English sentences were better recognized than abstract sentences an...
Previous experiments on the effects of imageability and deep-structure complexity upon the recall of...
The transformational complexity of a sentence has been alleged to affect its memorability. Using unp...
This paper presents three acceptability experiments investigating German verb-final clauses in order...
This paper presents three acceptability experiments investigating German verb-final clauses in order...
Speakers' memory of sentence structure can persist and modulate the syntactic choices of subsequent ...
Results from an experiment with two parts are presented in this paper. In part one, participants lis...
Sentences are easier to remember than ungrammatical strings (see Brener, 1940). There are at least t...
A rationale for indexing the structural complexity of sentences was introduced and an experiment rep...
Five experiments present the first piece of evidence from online processing (self-paced reading and ...
Short-term memory for active and passive sentences at two levels of grammatical complexity was teste...
Research provides evidence of correlations between measures of short-term memory (STM) and language ...
The effects on sentence, phrase, and pivotal word recall of variations in mean depth, type, and leng...
Sentences with doubly center-embedded relative clauses in which a verb phrase (VP) is missing are so...
Seven experiments using self-paced reading and eyetracking suggest that omitting the middle verb in ...
Smith (1981) found that concrete English sentences were better recognized than abstract sentences an...
Previous experiments on the effects of imageability and deep-structure complexity upon the recall of...
The transformational complexity of a sentence has been alleged to affect its memorability. Using unp...
This paper presents three acceptability experiments investigating German verb-final clauses in order...
This paper presents three acceptability experiments investigating German verb-final clauses in order...
Speakers' memory of sentence structure can persist and modulate the syntactic choices of subsequent ...
Results from an experiment with two parts are presented in this paper. In part one, participants lis...
Sentences are easier to remember than ungrammatical strings (see Brener, 1940). There are at least t...