Syntactic ambiguity abounds in natural language, yet humans have no diffculty coping with it. In fact, the process of ambiguity resolution is almost always unconscious. But it is not infallible, however, as example 1 demonstrates. 1. The horse raced past the barn fell. This sentence is perfectly grammatical, as is evident when it appears in the following context: 2. Two horses were being shown to to a prospective buyer. One was raced past a meadow and the other was raced past a barn. Grammatical yet unprocessable sentences such as 1. are called \u27garden-path sentences.\u27 Their existence provides an opportunity to investigate the human sentence processing mechanism by studying how and when it fails. The aim of this thesis is to constr...