从心理学和神经语言学的词汇主义中走出来

Alexandra Krauska, Ellen F. Lau
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引用次数: 4

摘要

在语言产生或理解的标准模型中,从记忆中检索并组合成句法结构的元素是“引理”或“词汇项”。这些模型隐式地采用“词汇主义”方法,该方法假设词汇项将含义、语法和形式存储在一起,句法和词汇过程是不同的,句法结构不会扩展到单词级别以下。在过去的几十年里,对类型学上多样化的语言进行的语言学研究为反对这种方法提供了强有力的证据。这些发现表明,句法过程在“词”层面上和“词”层面下都适用,意义和形式都部分由句法语境决定。这对语言处理的心理学和神经学模型以及我们理解不同类型的失语症和其他语言障碍的方式具有重要意义。作为这些模型的词汇学家假设的结果,演讲者用各种语言(包括英语)产生和理解的许多种类的句子对他们来说是具有挑战性的。在这里,我们把语言产生作为一个案例来研究。为了摆脱心理语言学和神经语言学中的词汇主义,仅仅更新单词或短语的句法表征是不够的;涉及语言生成的处理算法受到它们所操作的词法表示的约束,因此也需要重新构想。我们概述了反对词汇主义的论点,讨论了词汇主义的假设是如何在语言生产模型中表现出来的,并研究了他们努力解释的现象类型。我们还概述了一个非词汇主义的替代方案可能是什么样子,作为一个不依赖引理表示的模型,而是将知识表示为(a)意义和语法以及(b)语法和形式之间的独立映射,具有用于检索和组装句法结构的单个集成阶段。通过摆脱词汇主义的假设,这种模式提供了更好的跨语言覆盖,并与当代句法理论更好地保持一致。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Moving away from lexicalism in psycho- and neuro-linguistics
In standard models of language production or comprehension, the elements which are retrieved from memory and combined into a syntactic structure are “lemmas” or “lexical items.” Such models implicitly take a “lexicalist” approach, which assumes that lexical items store meaning, syntax, and form together, that syntactic and lexical processes are distinct, and that syntactic structure does not extend below the word level. Across the last several decades, linguistic research examining a typologically diverse set of languages has provided strong evidence against this approach. These findings suggest that syntactic processes apply both above and below the “word” level, and that both meaning and form are partially determined by the syntactic context. This has significant implications for psychological and neurological models of language processing as well as for the way that we understand different types of aphasia and other language disorders. As a consequence of the lexicalist assumptions of these models, many kinds of sentences that speakers produce and comprehend—in a variety of languages, including English—are challenging for them to account for. Here we focus on language production as a case study. In order to move away from lexicalism in psycho- and neuro-linguistics, it is not enough to simply update the syntactic representations of words or phrases; the processing algorithms involved in language production are constrained by the lexicalist representations that they operate on, and thus also need to be reimagined. We provide an overview of the arguments against lexicalism, discuss how lexicalist assumptions are represented in models of language production, and examine the types of phenomena that they struggle to account for as a consequence. We also outline what a non-lexicalist alternative might look like, as a model that does not rely on a lemma representation, but instead represents that knowledge as separate mappings between (a) meaning and syntax and (b) syntax and form, with a single integrated stage for the retrieval and assembly of syntactic structure. By moving away from lexicalist assumptions, this kind of model provides better cross-linguistic coverage and aligns better with contemporary syntactic theory.
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