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by Joan Bresnan

  • ISBN: 0262021587
  • Category: Reference
  • Author: Joan Bresnan
  • Subcategory: Words Language & Grammar
  • Other formats: lit rtf lit mbr
  • Language: English
  • Publisher: The MIT Press (December 28, 1982)
  • Pages: 704 pages
  • FB2 size: 1608 kb
  • EPUB size: 1922 kb
  • Rating: 4.9
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Download The Mental Representation of Grammatical Relations (Cognitive Theory and Mental Representation) fb2

Cognitive Processing of Grammatical Representations: " A Theory of the . oceedings{Baltin1985TheMR, title {The Mental Representation of Grammatical Relations}, author {Mark Baltin and Joan Bresnan}, year {1985} }. Mark Baltin, Joan Bresnan.

Cognitive Processing of Grammatical Representations: " A Theory of the Acquisition of Lexical Interpretive Grammars (S. Pinker); Toward a Theory of Lexico-Syntactic Interactions in Sentence Perception (M. Ford, J. Bresnan, and R. Kaplan); and Sentence Planning Units: Implications for the Speaker's Representation of Meaningful Relations Underlying Sentences (M. Ford).

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A mental representation (or cognitive representation), in philosophy of mind, cognitive psychology, neuroscience, and cognitive science, is a hypothetical internal cognitive symbol that represents external reality, or else a mental process that makes.

A mental representation (or cognitive representation), in philosophy of mind, cognitive psychology, neuroscience, and cognitive science, is a hypothetical internal cognitive symbol that represents external reality, or else a mental process that makes use of such a symbol: "a formal system for making explicit certain entities or types of information, together with a specification of how the system does this".

Books for People with Print Disabilities. Uploaded by ruth-worboys on May 16, 2018. Bresnan. The Mental Representation of Grammatical Relations (Cognitive Theory and Mental Representation). 0262021587 (ISBN13: 9780262021586).

In: Computer programming and formal systems, ed.

In: The mental representation of grammatical relations, ed. Bresnan, J. .Burks, A. W. (1963) Programming and theory of automata. In: Computer programming and formal systems, ed. Braffort, P. & Hirschberg, .

As such, mental representations (and the states and processes that involve them) need not be understood . RTM defines such intentional mental states as relations to mental representations, and explains the intentionality of the former in terms of the semantic properties of the latter.

As such, mental representations (and the states and processes that involve them) need not be understood only in computational terms. On this broader construal, mental representation is a philosophical topic with roots in antiquity and a rich history and literature predating the recent cognitive revolution, and which continues to be of interest in pure philosophy.

The Mental Representation of Grammatical Relations

The Mental Representation of Grammatical Relations. Cognitive Processing of Grammatical Representations: " A Theory of the Acquisition of Lexical Interpretive Grammars (S. The declarative representation of reasoning knowledge in the same formalism that is used to represent domain knowledge results in a powerful tool for the construction of expert systems.

In theoretical linguistics, the representation of how entities participate in.It is in this context that Croft develops his theory of grammatical categories and relations in SCGR.

In theoretical linguistics, the representation of how entities participate in experiential processes-that is, the structure of events-is one of the central problems regardless of one's favored model (cf. Dowty (1991), Hopper and Thompson (1980), Jackendoff (1983, 1990), Langacker (1987, 1991), Levin and Pinker (1991), Parsons (1990), Talmy (1985, 1988), Voorst (1988), and papers in BLS 17, especially those by DeLancey, Partee, and Talmy).

The editor of this volume, who is also author or coauthor of five of the contributions, has provided an introduction that not only affords an overview of the separate articles but also interrelates the basic issues in linguistics, psycholinguistics and cognitive studies that are addressed in this volume. The twelve articles are grouped into three sections, as follows: I. Lexical Representation: The Passive in Lexical Theory (J. Bresnan); On the Lexical Representation of Romance Reflexive Clitics (J. Grimshaw); and Polyadicity (J. Bresnan). II. Syntactic Representation: Lexical-Functional Grammar: A Formal Theory for Grammatical Representation (R. Kaplan and J. Bresnan); Control and Complementation (J. Bresnan); Case Agreement in Russian (C. Neidle); The Representation of Case in Icelandic (A. Andrews); Grammatical Relations and Clause Structure in Malayalam (K. P. Monahan); and Sluicing: A Lexical Interpretation Procedure (L. Levin). III. Cognitive Processing of Grammatical Representations: A Theory of the Acquisition of Lexical Interpretive Grammars (S. Pinker); Toward a Theory of Lexico-Syntactic Interactions in Sentence Perception (M. Ford, J. Bresnan, and R. Kaplan); and Sentence Planning Units: Implications for the Speaker's Representation of Meaningful Relations Underlying Sentences (M. Ford).

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