@article{gargett-2011-incrementality,
title = "Incrementality and the Dynamics of Routines in Dialogue",
author = "Gargett, Andrew",
editor = "Schlangen, David and
Rieser, Hannes and
Crocker, Matthew W.",
journal = "Dialogue {\&} Discourse",
volume = "2",
month = may,
year = "2011",
address = "Bielefeld, Germany",
publisher = "University of Bielefeld",
url = "https://aclanthology.org/2011.dnd-2.8/",
doi = "10.5087/dad.2011.108",
pages = "171--197",
abstract = "We propose a novel dual processing model of linguistic routinisation, specifically formulaic ex- pressions (from relatively fixed idioms, all the way through to looser collocational phenomena). This model is formalised using the Dynamic Syntax (DS) formal account of language processing, whereby we make a specific extension to the core DS lexical architecture to capture the dynamics of linguistic routinisation. This extension is inspired by work within cognitive science more broadly. DS has a range of attractive modelling features, such as full incrementality, as well as recent ac- counts of using resources of the core grammar for modelling a range of dialogue phenomena, all of which we deploy in our account. This leads to not only a fully incremental model of formulaic lan- guage, but further, this straightforwardly extends to routinised dialogue phenomena. We consider this approach to be a proof of concept of how interdisciplinary work within cognitive science holds out the promise of meeting challenges faced by modellers of dialogue and discourse."
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%0 Journal Article
%T Incrementality and the Dynamics of Routines in Dialogue
%A Gargett, Andrew
%J Dialogue & Discourse
%D 2011
%8 May
%V 2
%I University of Bielefeld
%C Bielefeld, Germany
%F gargett-2011-incrementality
%X We propose a novel dual processing model of linguistic routinisation, specifically formulaic ex- pressions (from relatively fixed idioms, all the way through to looser collocational phenomena). This model is formalised using the Dynamic Syntax (DS) formal account of language processing, whereby we make a specific extension to the core DS lexical architecture to capture the dynamics of linguistic routinisation. This extension is inspired by work within cognitive science more broadly. DS has a range of attractive modelling features, such as full incrementality, as well as recent ac- counts of using resources of the core grammar for modelling a range of dialogue phenomena, all of which we deploy in our account. This leads to not only a fully incremental model of formulaic lan- guage, but further, this straightforwardly extends to routinised dialogue phenomena. We consider this approach to be a proof of concept of how interdisciplinary work within cognitive science holds out the promise of meeting challenges faced by modellers of dialogue and discourse.
%R 10.5087/dad.2011.108
%U https://aclanthology.org/2011.dnd-2.8/
%U https://doi.org/10.5087/dad.2011.108
%P 171-197
Markdown (Informal)
[Incrementality and the Dynamics of Routines in Dialogue](https://aclanthology.org/2011.dnd-2.8/) (Gargett, DND 2011)
ACL