Sentence Processing
Psycholinguistic Studies Presented to Merrill Garrett
Routledge (Publisher)
1st Edition
Will be published approx. on 1. September 2026
Book
Hardback
460 pages
978-1-041-37746-7 (ISBN)
Description
The distinguished contributors to Sentence Processing, originally published in 1979, offered new articles dealing with theory and experimentation on sentence processing. A number of the chapters presented completely new experimental studies that are discussed within the broad context of theoretical issues involving human perception and production of language. The chapters together represented a type of psycholinguistic research at the time that focused both on the nature of human information processing and the coding of linguistic structure. Within the area of sentence perception, the authors discuss lexical and syntactic processing, with experimental materials that rely on methods such as phoneme-monitoring and the perception of time-compressed speech. Studies of sentence production receive similar coverage with analyses of speech errors, pauses, and other features of conversation. Here is a volume that offered the latest and most comprehensive discussion of sentence processing at the time. Today it can be read in its historical context.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Taylor & Francis
Target group
Adult education, General, and Postgraduate
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-041-37746-7 (9781041377467)
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions
William E. Cooper | Edward C. T. Walker
Sentence Processing
Psycholinguistic Studies Presented to Merrill Garrett
E-Book
approx. 09/2026
Taylor & Francis
€43.49
Not yet available
William E. Cooper | Edward C. T. Walker
Sentence Processing
Psycholinguistic Studies Presented to Merrill Garrett
E-Book
approx. 09/2026
Taylor & Francis
€43.49
Not yet available
Persons
William E. Cooper (aka Bill Cooper) is president emeritus at the University of Richmond. He has written books and articles on cognitive science, international relations, higher education, and haiku.
Ed (Edward) C. T. Walker is a consultant whose career includes experience as a consultant to the California State University and the Harvard Division of Continuing Education. He was CEO of the IMS Global Learning Consortium, Vice President of BBN Systems and Technologies, a staff member at Bell Laboratories and a Principal Research Scientist at MIT. He also was co-chair of the MERLOT Advisory Board and a member of Advisory Boards for the Curriki Foundation and the Open Knowledge Initiative. He has a Ph. D. in Psycholinguistics, is a graduate of the Greater Boston Executive Program in Business Management and was a Teaching Fellow in the Harvard Graduate School of Education.
Ed (Edward) C. T. Walker is a consultant whose career includes experience as a consultant to the California State University and the Harvard Division of Continuing Education. He was CEO of the IMS Global Learning Consortium, Vice President of BBN Systems and Technologies, a staff member at Bell Laboratories and a Principal Research Scientist at MIT. He also was co-chair of the MERLOT Advisory Board and a member of Advisory Boards for the Curriki Foundation and the Open Knowledge Initiative. He has a Ph. D. in Psycholinguistics, is a graduate of the Greater Boston Executive Program in Business Management and was a Teaching Fellow in the Harvard Graduate School of Education.
Content
Preface. 1. The Wherefores and Therefores of the Comptence-Performance Distinction Virginia Valian 2. Levels of Processing and the Structure of the Language Processor K. I. Forster 3. Time-Compressed Speech and the Study of Lexical and Syntactic Processing Martin S. Chodorow 4. Monitoring Sentence Comprehension Anne Cutler and Dennis Norris 5. Intonation and Ambiguity Roger Wales and Hugh Toner 6. Perpetual Mechanisms and Formal Properties of Main and Subordinate Clauses Thomas G. Bever and David J. Townsend 7. Some Hypotheses About Syntactic Processing in Sentence Comprehension V. M. Holmes 8. Superstrategy Janet Dean Fodor 9. Role of Efference Monitoring in the Detection of Self-Produced Speech Errors James R. Lackner and Betty H. Tuller 10. Speech Errors as Evidence for a Serial-Ordering Mechanism in Sentence Production Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel 11. Like Syntax John Robert Ross and William E. Cooper 12. Three Cheers for Propositional Attitudes (Some Reflections on D. C. Dennett's "Intentional Systems") J. A. Fodor. Author Index. Subject Index.