Priming effects in Combinatory Categorial Grammar

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Abstract

This paper presents a corpus-based account of structural priming in human sentence processing, focusing on the role that syntactic representations play in such an account. We estimate the strength of structural priming effects from a corpus of spontaneous spoken dialogue, annotated syntactically with Combinatory Categorial Grammar (CCG) derivations. This methodology allows us to test a range of predictions that CCG makes about priming. In particular, we present evidence for priming between lexical and syntactic categories encoding partially satisfied subcategorization frames, and we show that priming effects exist both for incremental and normal-form CCG derivations. © 2006 Association for Computational Linguistics.

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Reitter, D., Hockenmaier, J., & Keller, F. (2006). Priming effects in Combinatory Categorial Grammar. In COLING/ACL 2006 - EMNLP 2006: 2006 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing, Proceedings of the Conference (pp. 308–316). Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL). https://doi.org/10.3115/1610075.1610119

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