Cambridge University Press, 1985. — 428 p. — ISBN: 0521262038, 9780521262033.
This is a collection of new papers by leading researchers on natural language parsing. In the past, the problem of how people parse the sentences they hear — determine the identity of the words in these sentences and group these words into larger units — has been addressed in very different ways by experimental psychologists, by theoretical linguists, and by researchers in artificial intelligence, with little apparent relationship among the solutions proposed by each group. However, because of important advances in all these disciplines, research on parsing in each of these fields now seems to have something significant to contribute to the others, as this volume demonstrates. The volume includes some papers applying the results of experimental psychological studies of parsing to linguistic theory, others which present computational models of parsing, and a mathematical linguistics paper on tree-adjoining grammars and parsing.
Measuring syntactic complexity relative to discourse context.
Interpreting questions.
How can grammars help parsers?
Syntactic complexity.
Processing of sentences with intrasentential code switching.
Tree adjoining grammars: How much context-sensitivity is required to provide reasonable structural descriptions?
Parsing in functional unification grammar.
Parsing in a free word order language.
A new characterization of attachment preferences.
On not being led up the garden path: the use of context by the psychological syntax processor.
Do listeners compute linguistic representations?