Author: Dr. David Lowemann

Grammar and Expectation in Active Dependency Resolution: Experimental and Modeling Evidence From Norwegian

Abstract Filler-gap dependency resolution is often characterized as an active process. We probed the mechanisms that determine where and why comprehenders posit gaps during incremental processing using Norwegian as our test language. First, we investigated why active filler-gap dependency resolution is suspended inside island domains like embedded questions in some languages. Processing-based accounts hold that […]

Published on October 14, 2024

A Simple Computational Model of Semantic Priming in 18‐Month‐Olds

Abstract We propose a simple computational model that describes potential mechanisms underlying the organization and development of the lexical-semantic system in 18-month-old infants. We focus on two independent aspects: (i) on potential mechanisms underlying the development of taxonomic and associative priming, and (ii) on potential mechanisms underlying the effect of Inter Stimulus Interval on these […]

Published on October 14, 2024

Evaluation of an Algorithmic‐Level Left‐Corner Parsing Account of Surprisal Effects

Abstract This article evaluates the predictions of an algorithmic-level distributed associative memory model as it introduces, propagates, and resolves ambiguity, and compares it to the predictions of computational-level parallel parsing models in which ambiguous analyses are accounted separately in discrete distributions. By superposing activation patterns that serve as cues to other activation patterns, the model […]

Published on October 14, 2024