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COGSCI
2011

A Computational Cognitive Model of Syntactic Priming

12 years 8 months ago
A Computational Cognitive Model of Syntactic Priming
The psycholinguistic literature has identified two syntactic adaptation effects in language production: rapidly decaying short-term priming and long-lasting adaptation. To explain both effects, we present an ACT-R model of syntactic priming based on a wide-coverage, lexicalized syntactic theory that explains priming as facilitation of lexical access. In this model, two well-established ACT-R mechanisms, base-level learning and spreading activation, account for long-term adaptation and short-term priming, respectively. Our model simulates incremental language production and in a series of modeling studies we show that it accounts for (a) the inverse frequency interaction; (b) the absence of a decay in long-term priming; and (c) the cumulativity of long-term adaptation. The model also explains the lexical boost effect and the fact that it only applies to short-term priming. We also present corpus data that verifies a prediction of the model, i.e., that the lexical boost affects all le...
David Reitter, Frank Keller, Johanna D. Moore
Added 25 Aug 2011
Updated 25 Aug 2011
Type Journal
Year 2011
Where COGSCI
Authors David Reitter, Frank Keller, Johanna D. Moore
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