S | M | T | W | T | F | S |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
10 |
11 |
12 |
13 |
14 |
15 |
16 |
17 |
18 |
19 |
20 |
21 |
22 |
23 |
24 |
25 |
26 |
27 |
28 |
29 |
30 |
31 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
LangSci Lunch Talk: Nick Huang (LING)
Food and ideas bring people together. Our weekly lunch talk series provides students and faculty with the opportunity to present their in-progress work to a supportive, interdisciplinary audience.
Lunch is served starting at 12:15pm.
--------
A “missing NP illusion” in Mandarin Chinese doubly center-embedded sentences
A doubly center-embedded (DCE) sentence in English with a missing verb phrase, e.g. 'The dog the rat the cat chased ran away,' is judged to be relatively acceptable despite being ungrammatical. In this talk, I discuss a novel related illusion for Mandarin Chinese DCE sentences missing a noun phrase, and how it differs from its English counterpart. To account for the illusory properties of DCE sentences in both languages, it is proposed that argument-predicate pairings are built in a more bottom-up fashion. As a result, the parser prematurely completes a noun-verb link in both languages, with different representational consequences. I contrast this account with an alternative account in which earlier predictions are “forgotten” (Gibson & Thomas 1999), showing that the data is inconsistent with the alternative account.