LOT Winter School 2005 Groningen, The Netherlands, January 10-21, 2005 |
The interaction between syntax, information structure, and intonation is turning into one of the hot spots in theoretical and computational linguistic research. There is a growing awareness that empirically adequate linguistic analyses require all three modules of linguistic representation to be expressed in an architecture supporting constraints within and across the modules. And results of this linguistic research have started to inform computational work, e.g., on the generation of contextually appropriate syntax and intonation in dialog systems.
The course introduces and compares current approaches to the syntax information structure interface in three formal linguistic frameworks: Lexical-Functional Grammar (Choi, Holloway-King), Head-Driven Phrase Structure Grammar (Engdahl & Vallduví, De Kuthy & Meurers), and Combinatory Categorial Grammar (Steedman). After an introduction to the idea of information-packaging, the course turns to case studies highlighting how syntactic, pragmatic, and intonational constraints are expressed in the different frameworks, and how their interaction is captured. A brief introduction into each framework is included.
Returning to the need for empirically adequate linguistic analyses mentioned in the beginning, the course will end with a discussion of the question how corpus data can be used to inform linguistic research, and what is involved in expressing queries for theoretically relevant classes of data.
The following is an overview of the topics that will be discussed in the course, the publications which the individual lectures will be based on, and some additional reading material.
other relevant work we will touch on: