ABSTRACT

Psycholinguistics is an interdisciplinary field, and hence relationships are at its heart. First and foremost is the relationship between its two parent disciplines, psychology and linguistics, a relationship which has changed and advanced over the half century of the field's independent existence. At the beginning of the 21st Century, psycholinguistics forms part of the rapidly developing enterprise known as cognitive neuroscience, in which the relationship between biology and behavior plays a central role. Psycholinguistics is about language in communication, so that the relationship between language production and comprehension has always been important, and as psycholinguistics is an experimental discipline, it is likewise essential to find the right relationship between model and experiment.

This book focuses in turn on each of these four cornerstone relationships: Psychology and Linguistics, Biology and Behavior, Production and Comprehension, and Model and Experiment. The authors are from different disciplinary backgrounds, but share a commitment to clarify the ways that their research illuminates the essential nature of the psycholinguistic enterprise.

chapter 1|20 pages

The Cornerstones of Twenty-First Century Psycholinguistics

ByAnne Cutler, Wolfgang Klein, Stephen C. Levinson

part I|2 pages

Psychology and Linguistics

chapter 2|20 pages

Cognitive Mechanisms and Syntactic Theory

ByJulie E. Boland

chapter 4|12 pages

Linguistic Representation and Language Use in Aphasia

ByMarco Haverkort

chapter 5|16 pages

Data Mining at the Intersection of Psychology and Linguistics

ByR. Harald Baayen

chapter 6|18 pages

Establishing and Using Routines During Dialogue: Implications for Psychology and Linguistics

ByJ. Pickering Martin, Simon Garrod

chapter 7|16 pages

Defining the Relation Between Linguistics and Neuroscience

ByDavid Poeppel, David Embick

part II|2 pages

Biology and Behavior

chapter 8|16 pages

Genetic Specificity of Linguistic Heritability

ByKarin Stromswold

chapter 9|16 pages

The Neurobiology of Speech Perception

BySophie K. Scott

chapter 10|16 pages

Broca’s Complex as the Unification Space for Language

ByPeter Hagoort

part III|2 pages

Production and Comprehension

chapter 13|22 pages

Maximal Input and Feedback in Production and Comprehension

ByGabriella Vigliocco, Robert J. Hartsuiker

chapter 15|18 pages

Verbal Self-Monitoring

ByNiels O. Schiller

chapter 16|16 pages

The Production and Comprehension of Resumptive Pronouns in Relative Clause “Island” Contexts

ByFernanda Ferreira, Benjamin Swets

chapter 17|14 pages

On the Relationship Between Perception and Production in L2 Categories

ByNúria Sebastián-Gallés, Cristina Baus

part IV|2 pages

Model and Experiment

chapter 20|16 pages

How do Computational Models Help us Develop Better Theories?

ByDennis Norris

chapter 21|16 pages

Tools for Learning About Computational Models

ByMark A. Pitt, Daniel J. Navarro

chapter 22|18 pages

Rational Models of Comprehension: Addressing the Performance Paradox

ByMatthew W. Crocker

chapter 23|20 pages

Computation and Cognition: Four Distinctions and their

ByW. Tecumseh Fitch