Aspects of the relationship bewteen theories of grammar and theories of processing
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Asociación Española de Estudios Anglo-Norteamericanos
Abstract
The aim of this paper is to analyze the pros and cons of the relationship between theories of
grammar and psycholinguistic research conducted in laboratories. It is argued that current
optimism about the benefits that psycholinguistic research may bring to those interested in
the nature of language may be hard to reconcile with the difficulties there are in synchronising
the research agendas of linguistics and psycholinguistics. The main appeal of psycholinguistic
research lies in its superior testability standards. Through a brief examination of the simple
notion of apposition, it is argued that linguistics is indeed irremediably circular and
inconclusive, and that that is why some look to experimental research in language as a way of
circumventing the endemic weakness of grammatical theories. However, psycholinguists
cannot avoid a dependence on syntactic descriptions in order to formulate their own
predictions. This makes for more undesired circularity. Finally, the paper seeks to show that
at least some experiments can shed light on grammatical structure. A key issue will be to
ponder how psycholinguistic tools can help us meet the challenge of psychological adequacy
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Acuña Fariña, J. C. (2005). Aspects of the relationship between theories of grammar and theories of processing. Atlantis, 27.1, p. 11-27
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This research was funded by the Fund for Scientific Research of the Autonomous Government
of Galicia (grant no. PGIDT03PXIA20401PR). This grant is hereby gratefully acknowledged
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Copyright (c) 2005, The Authors. This work is under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike 4.0 International Licence (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)








