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Language and Communication

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Title: Language and Communication


1
Language and Communication
  • Sentence Processing

2
What do we do when we Process a Sentence?
  • Perceptual processes recognise words in a
    sentence.
  • ? lexical access provides syntactic and semantic
    knowledge to determine what kind of word each
    word is, and what it means
  • ? parsing/interpretation syntactic and semantic
    combination rules are used to put the words
    together into meaningful groups (and to group the
    groups) and to determine the literal meaning
  • ? pragmatics determines the meaning intended in
    the context

3
What is the Relation between the Stages of
Processing?
  • Two views
  • Lexical access and syntactic parsing are
    autonomous (self-contained modules) modular
    view.
  • Semantic (and contextual) information can be used
    to guide lexical access and syntactic analysis
    interactive view.

4
Does information flow back down the dotted lines?
Modular view says no
Interactive view says yes
From Whitney, pp. 205.
5
Ambiguity
  • Lexical ambiguity
  • A sentence contains a word with more than one
    meaning, and the appropriate meaning is usually
    determined from the context (see previous
    lecture).
  • Syntactic ambiguity
  • Where a clause or sentence may have more than
    one interpretation given the potential
    grammatical functions of the individual words
    (Berko-Gleason, pp.238)
  • The processing of ambiguous sentences turns out
    to be a crucial test case for theories of
    syntactic processing

6
Syntax
  • The words in a sentence are not just strung
    together one after the other, they are structured
    into phrases and clauses
  • Typical phrases might be the man (a noun
    phrase) and saw the man (a verb phrase)
  • Note that one phrase can occur within another
  • The way that words are structured into phrases,
    clauses and sentences can be depicted in tree
    diagrams
  • The trees are upside down with the root at the
    top
  • In understanding a sentence, we need to establish
    the groupings of the words so that we can go on
    to work out what the groups, and hence what the
    sentence, means.

7
Phrase (or Tree) Structure Rules
  • We can write rules that show how to build tree
    structures (or we can think of them as rules for
    analysing sentences)
  • S ? NP VP
  • (a sentence can be made up of a noun phrase
    followed by a verb phrase)
  • E.g. Jim slept OR The boy hit the ball
  • NP ? DET N
  • (a noun phrase can be a determiner an article
    or similar followed by a noun
  • E.g. The boy OR A ship
  • NP ? N
  • (a noun phrase can be just a noun e.g. Jim OR
    ships)
  • VP ? V NP
  • VP ? V
  • (a verb phrase can be a verb followed by a noun
    phrase or it can be just a verb)

8
Phrase (or Tree) Structure Rules
  • Then we have rules to introduce individual words
    at the bottom of the (upside down) trees
  • V ? hit, meet, jump..
  • DET ? the, a, this, that.
  • N ? boy, ball, Jim,..

9
Syntactic Tree Structures
S
The person doing something
The thing being done
NOUN PHRASE
VERB PHRASE
The thing that was having something done to it
NOUN PHRASE
DET
N
V
ADJ
N
DET
THE BOY HIT THE RED BALL
SUBJECT
OBJECT
VERB
10
Additional rules
  • VP ? V PP
  • PP ? P NP
  • PP Prepositional phrase, P preposition

11
THE YOUNG MAN STOOD IN THE HOLE
12
Some examples to parse..
  • The puppy found the child.
  • The house on the hill collapsed in the wind.
  • The ice melted.
  • The hot sun melted the ice.
  • A quaint old wooden house appeared.
  • The old tree swayed in the wind.

13
Reminder
  • Syntactic ambiguity
  • Where a clause or sentence may have more than
    one interpretation given the potential
    grammatical functions of the individual words
    (Gleason, pp.238).
  • Local ambiguity a sentence is only temporarily
    ambiguous.
  • After he rang his mother called the police
  • Global ambiguity sentence remains ambiguous
    after all the words have been considered.
  • The cop saw the man with the binoculars

14
Sentence Processing - Syntactic Ambiguity
  • Garden path sentences
  • In which the early part of the sentence make the
    reader or listener goes down the garden path
    and get the wrong interpretation
  • The horse raced past the barn fell (Bever, 1970)
  • The old man the boats.
  • Since Jay always jogs a mile seems like a short
    distance (Frazier Rayner, 1982).
  • Why do we prefer one interpretation of a
    syntactically ambiguous sentence to another?
  • What is the role of context in resolving
    syntactic ambiguity? Modular versus interactive
    views.

15
Real Headlines (Global Ambiguities)
  • Red tape holds up new bridge
  • Retired priest may marry Springsteen
  • British left waffles on Falklands
  • Safety Experts Say School Bus Passengers Should
    Be Belted
  • Panda Mating Fails Veterinarian Takes Over
  • Squad Helps Dog Bite Victim

16
Real Headlines
  • Miners Refuse to Work after Death
  • Juvenile Court to Try Shooting Defendant
  • Kids Make Nutritious Snacks
  • Local High School Dropouts Cut in Half
  • New Vaccine May Contain Rabies
  • Hospitals are Sued by 7 Foot Doctors
  • Westinghouse gives robot rights to firm

17
Church Notices
  • Don't let worry kill you let the church help.
  • For those of you who have children and don't know
    it, we have a nursery downstairs.
  • The ladies of the church have cast off clothing
    of every kind. They can be seen in the church
    basement Saturday.

18
The Problem
  • How do we characterise
  • the different kinds of AMBIGUITY?
  • the preference for one reading over another?
  • Phrase structure trees provide a way of thinking
    about possible explanations

19
Two Models
  • Garden path model only access one meaning - late
    closure and minimal attachment.
  • Constraint satisfaction model access both
    possible meanings but are conscious of only one.

20
The Garden Path TheoryLyn Frazier, 1970s and
1980s
  • Build trees using phrase structure rules, plus
    two principles that are also syntactic in nature
    (i.e. they do not refer to meaning)
  • Minimal Attachment
  • Prefer the interpretation that is accompanied by
    the simplest structure.
  • simplest fewest branchings (tree metaphor!)
  • Count the number of nodes branching points
  • Late Closure
  • Incorporate incoming material into the phrase or
    clause currently being processed. OR
  • Associate incoming material with the most recent
    material possible.

21
Parsing preferences minimal attachment
S
8 Nodes Preferred
NP
VP
the girl
V
NP
S
hit
NP
PP
NP
VP
the man
P
NP
the girl
V
NP
PP
with
the umbrella
hit
the man
P
NP
with
the umbrella
9 nodes Dispreferred
The girl hit the man with the umbrella.
22
Parsing Preferences .. late closure
S
Preferred
S
np
vp
np
vp
she
v
S'
adv
she
v
S'
said
np
vp
yesterday
said
np
vp
he
v
np
he
v
np
adv
tickled
her
tickled
her
yesterday
Dispreferred (Both have 10 nodes, so use LC not
MA)
She said he tickled her yesterday
23
S
NP
VP
S
the spy
V
PP
NP
saw
P
NP
the cop
with
the binoculars
but the cop didnt see him
The spy saw the cop with the binoculars but the
cop didnt see him.
24
S
NP
VP
the spy
V
NP
S
saw
NP
PP
the cop
P
NP
with
the binoculars
but the cop didnt see him
25
(No Transcript)
26
Non-MA
MA
The spy saw the cop with the revolver but the cop
didnt see him.
27
Constraint Satisfaction ModelTrueswell, et al.,
1994, and MacDonald, 1993
  • Different syntactic structures are activated by
    presence of words, word types (NOUN, VERB etc.)
    or sequences of words or word types
  • e.g. a DET followed by a NOUN will activate NP ?
    DET N syntactic structure
  • Strength of activation is dependent on the
    frequency of occurrence.
  • E.g. complement clauses are more common than
    relative clauses, so ..told the woman that..
    activates VP ? V NP S more strongly than NP ? NP
    RelClause

28
Constraint Satisfaction Model - cont
  • Other factors, such as semantic context, also
    provide constraints on the likely interpretation
    of a sentence, and may allow some syntactic
    structures to be ruled out very early during
    syntactic analysis
  • e.g. The evidence questioned .
  • The person questioned .
  • The model leaves it open how quickly the
    different kinds of constraint can act.
  • If semantic constraints act quickly, the model is
    interactive
  • Whether modular or interactive view is correct is
    still an issue.

29
Semantic expectations
  • Taraban McCelland, 1988, semantic expectations
    mean that when we read The spy saw.. this leads
    us to expect that the remainder of the sentence
    will describe what the spy used and it is this
    expectation, rather than MA, that leads to
    momentary confusion when see the noun revolver
    as this could not be used by the spy.
  • The couple admired the house with a friend but
    knew that it was over-priced.
  • The couple admired the house with a garden but
    knew that it was over-priced.

30
Taraban and McClelland - resultsThe Non-MA
structure may be favoured
Taraban McCelland, 1988 , J of memory and
language, 27, 597-632.
31
Another Minimal Attachment Ambiguity?
  • He told the woman that he was worried about to
    wait outside.
  • her.

32
Structures ...
8 nodes Dispreferred
6 nodes Preferred
33
Context Effects
  • Is syntactic ambiguity resolved only on the basis
    of syntactic information?
  • Alternative syntactic analyses alternative
    meanings...
  • Could syntactic ambiguity be resolved on the
    basis of meaning?
  • Using a relative clause presupposes that one
    needs to identify the thing being referred to
  • e.g. the woman that he was worried about

34
Referential Context
  • Altmann et al. (1992)
  • complement clause
  • He told the woman that he was worried about many
    other people
  • relative clause
  • He told the woman that he was worried about to
    wait outside
  • control
  • He asked the woman that he was worried about to
    wait outside

35
Eye-Tracking Data (Reading Times)
36
Factors Implicated in Ambiguity Resolution
  • structural
  • referential context
  • temporal context
  • the horse raced past the barn fell
  • any horse raced past the barn will fall
  • real world knowledge
  • after the police stopped the driver fled
  • after the lorry stopped the driver fled
  • relative frequency of usage of different meanings
    and/or structures.

37
Conclusion.. Questions remain
  • Is syntactic ambiguity resolved only on the basis
    of syntactic information?
  • Could syntactic ambiguity be resolved on the
    basis of meaning?
  • Issue autonomous versus interactive model?
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