Corpora: New Book: Usage-Based Models of Language

From: barlow@rice.edu
Date: Thu Jun 15 2000 - 10:59:21 MET DST

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    CSLI Publications, Stanford, announces:

    USAGE-BASED MODELS OF LANGUAGE

    Edited by
    Michael Barlow and Suzanne Kemmer
    Department of Linguistics, Rice University

    This book brings together papers by the foremost representatives of
    a range of theoretical and empirical approaches converging on a
    common goal: to account for language USE, or how speakers actually
    speak and understand language. Crucial to a usage-based approach are
    frequency, statistical patterns, and, most generally, linguistic
    experience. Linguistic competence is not seen as cognitively-
    encapsulated and divorced from performance, but as a system
    continually shaped, from inception, by linguistic usage events. The
    authors represented here were among the first to leave behind
    rule-based linguistic representations in favor of constraint-based
    systems whose structural properties actually emerge from usage.
    Such emergentist systems evince far greater cognitive and
    neurological plausibility than algorithmic, generative models.
    Approaches represented here include Cognitive Grammar, the Lexical
    Network Model, Competition Model, Relational Network Model, and
    Accessibility Theory. The empirical data come from phonological
    variation, syntactic change, psycholinguistic experiments, discourse,
    connectionist modeling of language acquisition, and linguistic corpora.

    USAGE-BASED MODELS OF LANGUAGE
    Stanford, CA: CSLI Publications, May 2000
    Paperback, ISBN 1-57586-220-4, USD $24.95
    Cloth, ISBN 1-57586-219-0, USD $64.95
    Questions: pubs@csli.stanford.edu (650) 723-1839. To order: please
    note that all CSLI Publications' titles are distributed by the
    Cambridge University Press and should be ordered directly from them.
    You can order online at http://www.cup.cam.ac.uk/ or in North
    America, http://www.cup.org/ .

    CONTENTS

    Introduction: A Usage-Based Conception of Language (21 pp.)
    SUZANNE KEMMER AND MICHAEL BARLOW

    A Dynamic Usage-Based Model (63 pp.)
    RONALD W. LANGACKER

    The Phonology of the Lexicon: Evidence From (20 pp.)
    Lexical Diffusion
    JOAN L. BYBEE

    Bidirectional Processing in Language and (32 pp.)
    Related Cognitive Systems
    SYDNEY LAMB

    Connectionism and Language Learning (28 pp.)
    BRIAN MACWHINNEY

    The Effect of the Interlocutor on Episodic Recall: (45 pp.)
    An Experimental Study
    CONNIE DICKINSON AND T. GIVoN

    The Development of Person Agreement Markers: (63 pp.)
    From Pronouns to Higher Accessibility Markers
    MIRA ARIEL

    Interpreting Usage: Construing the History of (25 pp.)
    Dutch Causal Verbs
    ARIE VERHAGEN

    Investigating Language Use through Corpus-Based (25 pp.)
    Analyses of Association Patterns
    DOUGLAS BIBER

    Usage, Blends and Grammar (30 pp.)
    MICHAEL BARLOW

    Subject and Author Index

    --------------------------------------------------------------------
    Michael Barlow www.ruf.rice.edu/~barlow
    Linguistics, Rice University Athelstan www.athel.com
    On leave: Max Planck Institute, Leipzig and SCS, Leeds University



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