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An Introduction To Syntactic Analysis And Theory
Matthias Schroder
- 01 Jan 2016
60
TL;DR: An introduction to syntactic analysis and theory is available in the authors' digital library an online access to it is set as public so you can get it instantly.
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Abstract: an introduction to syntactic analysis and theory is available in our digital library an online access to it is set as public so you can get it instantly. Our books collection hosts in multiple locations, allowing you to get the most less latency time to download any of our books like this one. Merely said, the an introduction to syntactic analysis and theory is universally compatible with any devices to read.
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Citations
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The Neural Representation of Sequences: From Transition Probabilities to Algebraic Patterns and Linguistic Trees
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Neurophysiological dynamics of phrase-structure building during sentence processing
Matthew J. Nelson,Imen El Karoui,Kristóf Giber,Xiaofang Yang,Laurent D. Cohen,Hilda Koopman,Sydney S. Cash,Lionel Naccache,John Hale,Christophe Pallier,Christophe Pallier,Stanislas Dehaene,Stanislas Dehaene,Stanislas Dehaene +13 more
TL;DR: The results provide initial intracranial evidence for the neurophysiological reality of the merge operation postulated by linguists and suggest that the brain compresses syntactically well-formed sequences of words into a hierarchy of nested phrases.
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BLiMP: The Benchmark of Linguistic Minimal Pairs for English
Alex Warstadt,Alicia Parrish,Haokun Liu,Anhad Mohananey,Wei Peng,Sheng-Fu Wang,Samuel R. Bowman +6 more
TL;DR: The Benchmark of Linguistic Minimal Pairs, a challenge set for evaluating the linguistic knowledge of language models (LMs) on major grammatical phenomena in English, finds that state-of-the-art models identify morphological contrasts related to agreement reliably, but they struggle with some subtle semantic and syntactic phenomena.
Abstract linguistic structure correlates with temporal activity during naturalistic comprehension.
TL;DR: It is found that hierarchical grammars independently predict timecourses from left anterior and posterior temporal lobe and Markov models are predictive in these regions and across a broader network that includes the inferior frontal gyrus.
225
References
Abstract linguistic structure correlates with temporal activity during naturalistic comprehension.
TL;DR: It is found that hierarchical grammars independently predict timecourses from left anterior and posterior temporal lobe and Markov models are predictive in these regions and across a broader network that includes the inferior frontal gyrus.
225
The role of semantic and syntactic constraints in the memorization of English sentences
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors demonstrate a differentiation between semantic and syntactic factors and a facilitory effect of both on learning, and demonstrate a difference in the effect of free recall on learning.
185
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Ordered Neurons: Integrating Tree Structures into Recurrent Neural Networks
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170
An event-related fMRI study of implicit phrase-level syntactic and semantic processing.
TL;DR: Examination of implicit syntactic and semantic processing at the phrasal level, using visually presented verb phrases, finds activations of the inferior parietal lobe, consistent with a visual oddball response reported previously, and the anterior cingulate gyrus, implicated for attention and memory-related processes in numerous studies.
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