Syntactic island constraints are generally viewed as paradigmatic evidence for the autonomy of syntax. However, the existence of exceptions has been known for some time. Close examination reveals that these exceptional phenomena resist purely syntactic explanations, requiring instead an account in terms of semantic relations like attribution, various kinds of semantic framing effects, and discourse variables like topic and focus. It will be argued that the syntactic and extrasyntactic factors which limit extraction can be subsumed into a general account based on a cognitive theory of attention. According to the analysis presented below, extraction phenomena represent a situation in which the language user must attend simultaneously to two p...
Information structure (IS) refers to the organization of new (essential) and given (redundant) infor...
This thesis aims to reveal the mechanisms and constraints involving in long-distance dependency form...
In a speech situation, the utterances produced by the speakers may not be salient for the hearers to...
Extraction constraints on long-distance dependencies – so-called islands – have been the subject of ...
A crucial part of understanding a sentence is to construct its syntactic structure. Without this, it...
People often speak about visually perceived events that unfold in real time. In doing so speakers re...
Competence-based theories of island effects play a central role in generative grammar, yet the grade...
This paper provides an overview of categorical and gradient effects in islands, with a focus on Engl...
This thesis is dedicated to two strong island effects: The Subject Condition and The Adjunct Conditi...
© 2020 Elsevier B.V. In order to explain the unacceptability of certain long-distance dependencies –...
Research into the interaction between attention and language has mainly focused on how language infl...
Sentences that are ungrammatical and yet intelligible are instances of what I call perfectly thinkab...
This dissertation is broadly concerned with the question: how do human cognitive limitations influen...
When considering how a complex system operates, the observable behavior depends upon both architectu...
Contains fulltext : 203907.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)We investigat...
Information structure (IS) refers to the organization of new (essential) and given (redundant) infor...
This thesis aims to reveal the mechanisms and constraints involving in long-distance dependency form...
In a speech situation, the utterances produced by the speakers may not be salient for the hearers to...
Extraction constraints on long-distance dependencies – so-called islands – have been the subject of ...
A crucial part of understanding a sentence is to construct its syntactic structure. Without this, it...
People often speak about visually perceived events that unfold in real time. In doing so speakers re...
Competence-based theories of island effects play a central role in generative grammar, yet the grade...
This paper provides an overview of categorical and gradient effects in islands, with a focus on Engl...
This thesis is dedicated to two strong island effects: The Subject Condition and The Adjunct Conditi...
© 2020 Elsevier B.V. In order to explain the unacceptability of certain long-distance dependencies –...
Research into the interaction between attention and language has mainly focused on how language infl...
Sentences that are ungrammatical and yet intelligible are instances of what I call perfectly thinkab...
This dissertation is broadly concerned with the question: how do human cognitive limitations influen...
When considering how a complex system operates, the observable behavior depends upon both architectu...
Contains fulltext : 203907.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)We investigat...
Information structure (IS) refers to the organization of new (essential) and given (redundant) infor...
This thesis aims to reveal the mechanisms and constraints involving in long-distance dependency form...
In a speech situation, the utterances produced by the speakers may not be salient for the hearers to...