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      General introduction: A comparative perspective on probabilistic variation in grammar

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          Abstract

          This special collection brings together research exploring and evaluating probabilistic variation patterns from a comparative perspective, thus highlighting current work situated at the crossroads of research on usage-based theoretical linguistics, variationist linguistics, and sociolinguistics. The contributions in the collection advance our understanding of the plasticity of syntactic knowledge on the part of language users with diverse regional and/or cultural backgrounds, and demonstrate how a probabilistic approach to grammatical variation can offer insight into the scope and limits of language variation. In this general introduction to the special collection, we provide some essential background for perspective, and subsequently summarize the contributions in the collection.

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          From Usage to Grammar: The Mind's Response to Repetition

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            How language production shapes language form and comprehension

            Language production processes can provide insight into how language comprehension works and language typology—why languages tend to have certain characteristics more often than others. Drawing on work in memory retrieval, motor planning, and serial order in action planning, the Production-Distribution-Comprehension (PDC) account links work in the fields of language production, typology, and comprehension: (1) faced with substantial computational burdens of planning and producing utterances, language producers implicitly follow three biases in utterance planning that promote word order choices that reduce these burdens, thereby improving production fluency. (2) These choices, repeated over many utterances and individuals, shape the distributions of utterance forms in language. The claim that language form stems in large degree from producers' attempts to mitigate utterance planning difficulty is contrasted with alternative accounts in which form is driven by language use more broadly, language acquisition processes, or producers' attempts to create language forms that are easily understood by comprehenders. (3) Language perceivers implicitly learn the statistical regularities in their linguistic input, and they use this prior experience to guide comprehension of subsequent language. In particular, they learn to predict the sequential structure of linguistic signals, based on the statistics of previously-encountered input. Thus, key aspects of comprehension behavior are tied to lexico-syntactic statistics in the language, which in turn derive from utterance planning biases promoting production of comparatively easy utterance forms over more difficult ones. This approach contrasts with classic theories in which comprehension behaviors are attributed to innate design features of the language comprehension system and associated working memory. The PDC instead links basic features of comprehension to a different source: production processes that shape language form.
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              Frequency and the emergence of linguistic structure

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                2397-1835
                Glossa: a journal of general linguistics
                Ubiquity Press
                2397-1835
                29 August 2018
                2018
                : 3
                : 1
                : 94
                Affiliations
                [1 ]University of Birmingham, 3 Elms Road, B15 2TT Birmingham, GB
                [2 ]KU Leuven, Blijde-Inkomststraat 21, 3000 Leuven, BE
                [3 ]English Department, University of Zurich, Plattenstrasse 47, 8032 Zürich, CH
                [4 ]Department of English, Justus Liebig University Gießen, Otto-Behaghel-Strasse 10 B, 35394 Giessen, DE
                Article
                10.5334/gjgl.690
                93013670-9a9f-4c21-9da5-4c301adb02c7
                Copyright: © 2018 The Author(s)

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.

                History
                : 08 May 2018
                : 30 May 2018
                Categories
                Research article

                General linguistics,Linguistics & Semiotics
                syntactic variation,sociolinguistics,comparative linguistics,probabilistic grammar

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