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Grammatical Encoding for Speech Production

Grammatical encoding is the process by which speakers translate a thought into a structured sentence appropriate to convey it.

Linda Ruth Wheeldon (Author), Agnieszka Konopka (Author)

9781009264556, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 30 March 2023

75 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 0.4 cm, 0.135 kg

During the production of spoken sentences, the linearisation of a 'thought' is accomplished via the process of grammatical encoding, i.e., the building of a hierarchical syntactic frame that fixes the linear order of lexical concepts. While much research has demonstrated the independence of lexical and syntactic representations, exactly what is represented remains a matter of dispute. Moreover, theories differ in terms of whether words or syntax drive grammatical encoding. This debate is also central to theories of the time-course of grammatical encoding. Speaking is usually a rapid process in which articulation begins before an utterance has been entirely planned. Current theories of grammatical encoding make different claims about the scope of grammatical encoding prior to utterance onset, and the degree to which planning scope is determined by linguistic structure or by cognitive factors. The authors review current theories of grammatical encoding and evaluate them in light of relevant empirical evidence. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.

1. Introduction
2. The independence of syntactic and lexical representations: evidence from structural priming
3. The time-course of grammatical encoding: planning scope
4. Summing Up
References.

Subject Areas: Psycholinguistics [CFD]

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