Book contents
- Reflections on Psycholinguistic Theories
- Reflections on Psycholinguistic Theories
- Copyright page
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Introduction
- Part I Both Sides, Now
- Part II Six Different Ways
- Introduction to Part II
- 4 (Case #1) ‘Starry, starry night’: The problem of phoneme discrimination
- 5 (Case #2) ‘There’s a word for it’: Are words more than labels?
- 6 (Case #3) ‘Running up that hill’: Mapping events to syntax
- 7 (Case #4) ‘Me, myself, I’: Representing and processing co-reference
- 8 (Case #5) ‘Be my number two’ … won’t you?: The problem of partial generalisations
- 9 (Case #6) ‘Cwucial questions’: Investigating extraction
- Conclusion to Part II
- Part III Say it ain’t so, Joe
- Part IV A Tale of Two Cities
- Epilogue
- Acknowledgments, credits and permissions
- References
- Index
Conclusion to Part II
from Part II - Six Different Ways
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 December 2017
- Reflections on Psycholinguistic Theories
- Reflections on Psycholinguistic Theories
- Copyright page
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Introduction
- Part I Both Sides, Now
- Part II Six Different Ways
- Introduction to Part II
- 4 (Case #1) ‘Starry, starry night’: The problem of phoneme discrimination
- 5 (Case #2) ‘There’s a word for it’: Are words more than labels?
- 6 (Case #3) ‘Running up that hill’: Mapping events to syntax
- 7 (Case #4) ‘Me, myself, I’: Representing and processing co-reference
- 8 (Case #5) ‘Be my number two’ … won’t you?: The problem of partial generalisations
- 9 (Case #6) ‘Cwucial questions’: Investigating extraction
- Conclusion to Part II
- Part III Say it ain’t so, Joe
- Part IV A Tale of Two Cities
- Epilogue
- Acknowledgments, credits and permissions
- References
- Index
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Reflections on Psycholinguistic TheoriesRaiding the Inarticulate, pp. 116Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2018