Literature DB >> 15641433

Verb subcategorization frequencies: American English corpus data, methodological studies, and cross-corpus comparisons.

Susanne Gahl1, Dan Jurafsky, Douglas Roland.   

Abstract

Verb subcategorization frequencies (verb biases) have been widely studied in psycholinguistics and play an important role in human sentence processing. Yet available resources on subcategorization frequencies suffer from limited coverage, limited ecological validity, and divergent coding criteria. Prior estimates of verb transitivity, for example, vary widely with corpus size, coverage, and coding criteria This article provides norming data for 281 verbs of interest to psycholinguistic research, sampled from a corpus of American English, along with a detailed coding manual. We examine the effect on transitivity bias of various coding decisions and methods of computing verb biases.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15641433     DOI: 10.3758/bf03195591

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Behav Res Methods Instrum Comput        ISSN: 0743-3808


  7 in total

1.  Heavy NP shift is the parser's last resort: Evidence from eye movements.

Authors:  Adrian Staub; Charles Clifton; Lyn Frazier
Journal:  J Mem Lang       Date:  2006-04       Impact factor: 3.059

2.  Sentence Repetition Accuracy in Adults With Developmental Language Impairment: Interactions of Participant Capacities and Sentence Structures.

Authors:  Gerard H Poll; Carol A Miller; Janet G van Hell
Journal:  J Speech Lang Hear Res       Date:  2016-04-01       Impact factor: 2.297

3.  The return of the repressed: Abandoned parses facilitate syntactic reanalysis.

Authors:  Adrian Staub
Journal:  J Mem Lang       Date:  2007-08       Impact factor: 3.059

4.  Processing temporary syntactic ambiguity: the effect of contextual bias.

Authors:  Mohamed Taha Mohamed; Charles Clifton
Journal:  Q J Exp Psychol (Hove)       Date:  2011-07-04       Impact factor: 2.143

5.  Frequency of Basic English Grammatical Structures: A Corpus Analysis.

Authors:  Douglas Roland; Frederic Dick; Jeffrey L Elman
Journal:  J Mem Lang       Date:  2007-10-01       Impact factor: 3.059

6.  The wind chilled the spectators, but the wine just chilled: Sense, structure, and sentence comprehension.

Authors:  Mary Hare; Jeffrey L Elman; Tracy Tabaczynski; Ken McRae
Journal:  Cogn Sci       Date:  2009-03-31

7.  Corpus-Based Transitivity Biases in Individuals with Aphasia.

Authors:  Jennifer DiLallo; Heidi Mettler; Gayle DeDe
Journal:  Aphasiology       Date:  2017-01-20       Impact factor: 2.773

  7 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.