Null arguments and the inverse problem

Native speakers can reconstruct null arguments from a linear string of words where they are notoriously absent. How they solve this problem remains an unsolved and largely unaddressed issue. This article argues for a unified analysis of null arguments that relies on bare sensory input. The key assum...

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Main Author: Pauli Brattico
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2021-01-01
Series:Glossa
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/1189
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spelling doaj-3aa3a471dbd7497e8133f4426be137392021-09-02T14:03:16ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesGlossa2397-18352021-01-016110.5334/gjgl.1189589Null arguments and the inverse problemPauli Brattico0IUSS University School for Advanced Studies, Piazza della Vittoria n. 15, 27100 PaviaNative speakers can reconstruct null arguments from a linear string of words where they are notoriously absent. How they solve this problem remains an unsolved and largely unaddressed issue. This article argues for a unified analysis of null arguments that relies on bare sensory input. The key assumption is that antecedent recovery takes place at the syntax-semantics interface if and only if the unvalued phi-features of a lexical element cannot be valued from the information available in the sensory input. The analysis unifies the theory of finite null subject pronouns and control and furthermore interprets null argument sentences without generating phrasal null pronouns. Evidence is considered from three languages with distinct null argument profiles: English (non-pro drop), Italian (consistent pro-drop) and Finnish (partial prodrop). Finally, the model was formalized and tested by means of a computer simulation.https://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/1189null argumentscontrolpro-dropcomputational linguisticslanguage comprehensionparsing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pauli Brattico
spellingShingle Pauli Brattico
Null arguments and the inverse problem
Glossa
null arguments
control
pro-drop
computational linguistics
language comprehension
parsing
author_facet Pauli Brattico
author_sort Pauli Brattico
title Null arguments and the inverse problem
title_short Null arguments and the inverse problem
title_full Null arguments and the inverse problem
title_fullStr Null arguments and the inverse problem
title_full_unstemmed Null arguments and the inverse problem
title_sort null arguments and the inverse problem
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series Glossa
issn 2397-1835
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Native speakers can reconstruct null arguments from a linear string of words where they are notoriously absent. How they solve this problem remains an unsolved and largely unaddressed issue. This article argues for a unified analysis of null arguments that relies on bare sensory input. The key assumption is that antecedent recovery takes place at the syntax-semantics interface if and only if the unvalued phi-features of a lexical element cannot be valued from the information available in the sensory input. The analysis unifies the theory of finite null subject pronouns and control and furthermore interprets null argument sentences without generating phrasal null pronouns. Evidence is considered from three languages with distinct null argument profiles: English (non-pro drop), Italian (consistent pro-drop) and Finnish (partial prodrop). Finally, the model was formalized and tested by means of a computer simulation.
topic null arguments
control
pro-drop
computational linguistics
language comprehension
parsing
url https://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/1189
work_keys_str_mv AT paulibrattico nullargumentsandtheinverseproblem
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