
Contents
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21.1. Introduction 21.1. Introduction
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21.2. Language Production 21.2. Language Production
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21.2.1 A Consensus Model 21.2.1 A Consensus Model
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21.2.2 Empirical Evidence for the Two-stage Model 21.2.2 Empirical Evidence for the Two-stage Model
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21.2.3 Production Specific Influences on Grammar 21.2.3 Production Specific Influences on Grammar
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21.2.3.1 Incrementality 21.2.3.1 Incrementality
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21.2.3.2 Accessibility 21.2.3.2 Accessibility
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21.2.4 Debates in Language Production 21.2.4 Debates in Language Production
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21.2.4.1 Are Lexical Representations Modality General or Modality Specific? 21.2.4.1 Are Lexical Representations Modality General or Modality Specific?
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21.2.4.2 How Many Steps to Produce Words in Order? 21.2.4.2 How Many Steps to Produce Words in Order?
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21.2.4.3 Structural Influences in Sentence Production 21.2.4.3 Structural Influences in Sentence Production
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21.2.4.4 The PC Problems: Performance/Competence and Production/Comprehension. Are There Shared Structural Representations? 21.2.4.4 The PC Problems: Performance/Competence and Production/Comprehension. Are There Shared Structural Representations?
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21.2.5 The Developing Language Production System 21.2.5 The Developing Language Production System
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21.2.6 Integrating Constructions into a Theory of Sentence Production 21.2.6 Integrating Constructions into a Theory of Sentence Production
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21.5. Conclusion 21.5. Conclusion
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21 Psycholinguistics
Get accessGiulia M. L. Bencini is Assistant Professor in the Communication Sciences Program at the Hunter College Brookdale Health Sciences campus. She obtained her Ph.D. in linguistics from the University of Illinois in 2002 and after that worked as a National Institute of Health funded postdoctoral research fellow at the Language Acquisition Research Center, at Hunter College-CUNY. She is an expert in psycholinguistics and combines insights and methods from linguistic theory, psycholinguistics, and language pathology in her work.
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Published:16 December 2013
Cite
Abstract
This chapter focuses on psycholinguistics of language production. It provides empirical evidence for and against the two-stage model of language production, which assumes separate levels for functional (semantic and syntactic) processing, as well as for positional processing. The chapter also discusses the results of studies supporting the existence of lexically independent structure building operations in language production in addition to lexical representations. It also contends that lexically independent structural processes often receive a straightforward interpretation as abstract constructions in a Construction Grammar framework.
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