Background - Linguists and psychologists have explained the remarkable similarities in the orderings of linguistic elements across languages by suggesting that our inborn ability for language makes available certain innately wired primitives. Different types of adjectives, adverbs, and other elements in the functional spine are considered to occupy fixed positions via innate hierarchies that determine orderings such as A>B>C, banning other permutations (*B>C>A). The goal of this research is to tap into the nature and rigidity of such hierarchies by comparing what happens when people process orderings that either comply with them or violate them. Method - N = 170 neurotypical, adult speakers completed a timed forced choice task that featured...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Dept. of Linguistic...
We contrasted two hypotheses concerning how speakers determine adjective order during referential co...
The distribution of typological patterns across languages has occupied considerable space in recent ...
It has long been recognised that phrases and sentences are organised hierarchically, but many comput...
Understanding the driving factors behind typological patterns, or universals, has long been an impor...
The talk focuses on several experiments which were conducted during the ongoing project Probing the ...
Recent work has used artificial language experiments to argue that hierarchical representations driv...
It is generally assumed that hierarchical phrase structure plays a central role in human language. H...
Typological data shows a tendency for languages to exhibit harmonic (i.e. consistent) ordering betwe...
Conventional generative theories often consider language acquisition as governed by a set of learnin...
From English to Hungarian to Mokilese, speakers exhibit strong ordering preferences in multi-adjecti...
In this talk we will focus on the universal hierarchy of functional projections that host specific t...
Cross-linguistically, heads tend to be ordered consistently relative to dependents. This tendency is...
Recurring traits across languages have been argued to relate directly to constraints imposed by the ...
Word order harmony describes the tendency, found across the world's languages, to consistently order...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Dept. of Linguistic...
We contrasted two hypotheses concerning how speakers determine adjective order during referential co...
The distribution of typological patterns across languages has occupied considerable space in recent ...
It has long been recognised that phrases and sentences are organised hierarchically, but many comput...
Understanding the driving factors behind typological patterns, or universals, has long been an impor...
The talk focuses on several experiments which were conducted during the ongoing project Probing the ...
Recent work has used artificial language experiments to argue that hierarchical representations driv...
It is generally assumed that hierarchical phrase structure plays a central role in human language. H...
Typological data shows a tendency for languages to exhibit harmonic (i.e. consistent) ordering betwe...
Conventional generative theories often consider language acquisition as governed by a set of learnin...
From English to Hungarian to Mokilese, speakers exhibit strong ordering preferences in multi-adjecti...
In this talk we will focus on the universal hierarchy of functional projections that host specific t...
Cross-linguistically, heads tend to be ordered consistently relative to dependents. This tendency is...
Recurring traits across languages have been argued to relate directly to constraints imposed by the ...
Word order harmony describes the tendency, found across the world's languages, to consistently order...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Dept. of Linguistic...
We contrasted two hypotheses concerning how speakers determine adjective order during referential co...
The distribution of typological patterns across languages has occupied considerable space in recent ...