Colorado Research in Linguistics

An ACT-R Model of Sentence Sorting with Argument Structure Constructions

Anna M. Fowles-Winkler and Laura Michaelis

Abstract for paper presented at
Linguistic Society of America Annual Meeting
Oakland, CA
January 6-9, 2005

Based on the results of a sorting task involving verbs and grammatical patterns, Bencini & Goldberg (2000) argue that "argument structure constructions are directly associated with sentence meaning." We explore this hypothesis by attempting to replicate their results using a nonhuman categorizer: a cognitive model based on ACT-R (Anderson & Lebiere 1998). The model replicated the sentence-sorting behaviors of Bencini & Goldberg's subjects, but did so using formal cues alone. This outcome suggests that the subjects in the Bencini & Goldberg study were not necessarily attending to constructional meaning, and lends support to Bock's (1986) conclusions regarding syntactic priming: subjects' similarity judgments are as likely to be based on syntactic form alone as they are to involve syntax-semantic mapping.

Anna Fowles-Winkler is an MA student in the Department of Linguistics at the University of Colorado. She can be reached at Anna.Winkler@Colorado.EDU.

Laura Michaelis is Associate Professor of Linguistics at the University of Colorado. She can be reached at Laura.Michaelis@Colorado.EDU.

Colorado Research in Linguistics - Volume 18, Issue 1 - June 2005

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Colorado Research in Linguistics is the working papers journal of the Department of Linguistics at the University of Colorado.


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