Robin Melnick
2019
Priming vs. Inhibition of Optional Infinitival “to”
Robin Melnick
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Thomas Wasow
Proceedings of the Workshop on Cognitive Modeling and Computational Linguistics
The word “to” that precedes verbs in English infinitives is optional in at least two environments: in what Wasow et al. (2015) previously called the “do-be” construction, and in the complement of “help”, which we explore in the present work. In the “do-be” construction, Wasow et al. found that a preceding infinitival “to” increases the use of following optional “to”, but the use of “to” in the complement of help is reduced following “to help”. We examine two hypotheses regarding why the same function word is primed by prior use in one construction and inhibited in another. We then test predictions made by the two hypotheses, finding support for one of them.
2010
Crowdsourcing and language studies: the new generation of linguistic data
Robert Munro
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Steven Bethard
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Victor Kuperman
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Vicky Tzuyin Lai
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Robin Melnick
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Christopher Potts
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Tyler Schnoebelen
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Harry Tily
Proceedings of the NAACL HLT 2010 Workshop on Creating Speech and Language Data with Amazon’s Mechanical Turk
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Co-authors
- Robert Munro 1
- Steven Bethard 1
- Victor Kuperman 1
- Vicky Tzuyin Lai 1
- Christopher Potts 1
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