The Relationship between Syntactic and Semantic Processes in Sentence Comprehension
Loading...
Date
1994-04
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Ohio State University. Department of Linguistics
Abstract
Two experiments investigate how lexically ambiguous input is handled by the sentence processing system and shed light on the relationship between syntactic and semantic processing. Sentence contexts containing ambiguous verbs (e.g., Which salad/baseball did Janet toss... probe-word: Bill) are used to investigate how subcategorization and thematic role information is used by the sentence processing system. The results are consistent with a model in which the syntactic processing system uses subcategorization information to compute all "legal" structures in parallel, without consideration of semantic information from the context. Meanwhile, the semantic processing system uses contextual information to pursue the single most likely semantic analysis. The resulting syntactic and semantic representations are checked against each other, and inconsistent analyses discarded.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Working Papers in Linguistics, no. 44 (1994), 70-91.