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Cognition
Volume 105, Issue 2, November 2007, Pages 300-333
 
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doi:10.1016/j.cognition.2006.09.011    How to Cite or Link Using DOI (Opens New Window)
Copyright © 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Minimization of dependency length in written Englishstar, open

David TemperleyCorresponding Author Contact Information, a, E-mail The Corresponding Author

aEastman School of Music, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY, USA

Received 10 November 2005; 
revised 12 September 2006; 
accepted 18 September 2006. 
Available online 30 October 2006.

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Abstract

Gibson’s Dependency Locality Theory (DLT) [Gibson, E. 1998. Linguistic complexity: locality of syntactic dependencies. Cognition, 68, 1–76; Gibson, E. 2000. The dependency locality theory: A distance-based theory of linguistic complexity. In A. Marantz, Y. Miyashita, & W. O’Neil (Eds.), Image, Language, Brain (pp. 95–126). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.] proposes that the processing complexity of a sentence is related to the length of its syntactic dependencies: longer dependencies are more difficult to process. The DLT is supported by a variety of phenomena in language comprehension. This raises the question: Does language production reflect a preference for shorter dependencies as well? I examine this question in a corpus study of written English, using the Wall Street Journal portion of the Penn Treebank. The DLT makes a number of predictions regarding the length of constituents in different contexts; these predictions were tested in a series of statistical tests. A number of findings support the theory: the greater length of subject noun phrases in inverted versus uninverted quotation constructions, the greater length of direct-object versus subject NPs, the greater length of postmodifying versus premodifying adverbial clauses, the greater length of relative-clause subjects within direct-object NPs versus subject NPs, the tendency towards “short-long” ordering of postmodifying adjuncts and coordinated conjuncts, and the shorter length of subject NPs (but not direct-object NPs) in clauses with premodifying adjuncts versus those without.

Keywords: Linguistic complexity; Syntactic dependency; Sentence processing; Corpus studies

Article Outline

1. Dependency length and complexity
2. Preference for short left-branching constituents
3. Heads with multiple dependents
4. Alternative explanations
5. Further issues
Appendix A
References



Cognition
Volume 105, Issue 2, November 2007, Pages 300-333
 
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