Bibliographic Information

Formal grammar : theory and implementation

edited by Robert Levine

(Vancouver studies in cognitive science, v. 2)

Oxford University Press, 1992

  • : pbk

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Note

Papers from a Feb. 1989 conference hosted by the Cognitive Science Programme at Simon Fraser University

Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

: pbk ISBN 9780195073102

Description

The second volume in the Vancouver Studies in Cognitive Science series, this collection presents recent work in the fields of phonology, morphology, semantics, and neurolinguistics. Its overall theme is the relationship between the contents of grammatical formalisms and their real-time realizations in machine or biological systems. Individual essays address such topics as learnability, implementability, computational issues, parameter setting, and neurolinguistic issues. Contributors include Janet Dean Fodor, Richard T. Oehrle, Bob Carpenter, Edward P. Stabler, Elan Dresher, Arnold Zwicky, Mary-Louis Kean, and Lewis P. Shapiro.

Table of Contents

1: J.D. Fodor: Learnability of Phrase Structure Grammars J.M. Gawron: Comment 2: R.T. Oehrle: Dynamic Categorial Grammar P. Jacobson: Comment 3: B. Carpenter: Categorial Grammars, Lexical Rules, and the English Predicative 4: E.P. Stabler, Jr.: Implementing Government Binding Theories V. Dahl: Comment 5: B.E. Dresher: A Learning Model for a Parametric Theory in Phonology K. Church: Comment 6: A.M. Zwickey: Some Choices in the Theory of Morphology 7: S. Crain and H. Hamburger: Semantics, Knowledge, and NP Modification 8: M.-L. Kean: On the Development of Biologically Real Models of Human Linguistic Capacity 9: L.P. Shapiro: Properties of Lexical Entries and Their Real-Time Implementation
Volume

ISBN 9780195073140

Description

This is the second volume in the Vancouver studies in Cognitive Science series, and also the second in a series of conferences hosted by the Cognitive Science Programme at Simon Fraser University devoted to the exploration of issues in cognition and the nature of mental representation. The volumes overall theme is the relationship between the contents of grammatical formalisms and their real-time realizations in machine or biological systems. The range of topics includes issues of learnability, implementary and computational issues, parameter setting, and neurolinguistic issues. The core subdisciplines of linguistics - syntax, semantics, morphology, and phonology - are all represented. The contributions are on the leading edge of research in these fields.

Table of Contents

1: J.D. Fodor: Learnability of Phrase Structure Grammars J.M. Gawron: Comment 2: R.T. Oehrle: Dynamic Categorial Grammar P. Jacobson: Comment 3: B. Carpenter: Categorial Grammars, Lexical Rules, and the English Predicative 4: E.P. Stabler, Jr.: Implementing Government Binding Theories V. Dahl: Comment 5: B.E. Dresher: A Learning Model for a Parametric Theory in Phonology K. Church: Comment 6: A.M. Zwickey: Some Choices in the Theory of Morphology 7: S. Crain and H. Hamburger: Semantics, Knowledge, and NP Modification 8: M.-L. Kean: On the Development of Biologically Real Models of Human Linguistic Capacity 9: L.P. Shapiro: Properties of Lexical Entries and Their Real-Time Implementation

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