Understanding and measuring sentence acceptability is of fundamental importance for linguists, but although many measures for doing so have been developed, relatively little is known about some of their psychometric properties. In this paper we evaluate within- and between-participant test-retest reliability on a wide range of measures of sentence acceptability. Doing so allows us to estimate how much of the variability within each measure is due to factors including participant-level individual differences, sample size, response styles, and item effects. The measures examined include Likert scales, two versions of forced-choice judgments, magnitude estimation, and a novel measure based on Thurstonian approaches in psychophysics. We reprodu...
The goal of the present study is to provide a direct comparison of the results of informal judgment ...
A central and still contested question in linguistics is “What makes a sentence good?” This thesis l...
Linguistic theory is built on an empirical foundation consisting largely of sentence acceptability j...
In this paper, we deal with the issue of variability in different measures of linguistic acceptabili...
Acceptability judgments are a major source of data in theoretical linguistics. Most of the contrasts...
This chapter addresses how linguists’ empirical (syntactic) claims should be tested with non-linguis...
The reliability of acceptability judgments made by individual linguists has often been called into q...
The term experimental syntax – the use of psycholinguistic methodologies for the collection of accep...
While published linguistic judgments sometimes differ from the judgments found in large-scale formal...
Syntactic satiation is a phenomenon in which certain ungrammatical structures increase in acceptabil...
We here quantify the qualities of language. Specifically, we derive numerical values, and associated...
The question of whether humans represent grammatical knowledge as a binary condition on membership i...
Previous investigations into the validity of acceptability judgment data have focused almost exclusi...
Acceptability judgments are the primary source of data for linguistic theory, based on the assumptio...
Häussler J, Juzek TS. Variation in Participants and Stimuli in Acceptability Experiments. In: Goodal...
The goal of the present study is to provide a direct comparison of the results of informal judgment ...
A central and still contested question in linguistics is “What makes a sentence good?” This thesis l...
Linguistic theory is built on an empirical foundation consisting largely of sentence acceptability j...
In this paper, we deal with the issue of variability in different measures of linguistic acceptabili...
Acceptability judgments are a major source of data in theoretical linguistics. Most of the contrasts...
This chapter addresses how linguists’ empirical (syntactic) claims should be tested with non-linguis...
The reliability of acceptability judgments made by individual linguists has often been called into q...
The term experimental syntax – the use of psycholinguistic methodologies for the collection of accep...
While published linguistic judgments sometimes differ from the judgments found in large-scale formal...
Syntactic satiation is a phenomenon in which certain ungrammatical structures increase in acceptabil...
We here quantify the qualities of language. Specifically, we derive numerical values, and associated...
The question of whether humans represent grammatical knowledge as a binary condition on membership i...
Previous investigations into the validity of acceptability judgment data have focused almost exclusi...
Acceptability judgments are the primary source of data for linguistic theory, based on the assumptio...
Häussler J, Juzek TS. Variation in Participants and Stimuli in Acceptability Experiments. In: Goodal...
The goal of the present study is to provide a direct comparison of the results of informal judgment ...
A central and still contested question in linguistics is “What makes a sentence good?” This thesis l...
Linguistic theory is built on an empirical foundation consisting largely of sentence acceptability j...