John Benjamins, 2008. — vii, 292 pages. — (Pragmatics & Beyond New Series). — ISBN: 978-90-272-5416-0.
It is a commonplace to say that the meaning of text is more than the conjunction of the meaning of its constituents. But, what are the rules governing its interpretation, and what are the constraints that define well-formed discourse? Answers to these questions can be given from various perspectives.
In this edited volume, leading scientists in the field investigate these questions from structural, cognitive, and computational perspectives. The last decades have seen the development of numerous formal frameworks in which the structure of discourse can be analysed, the most important of them being the Linguistic Discourse Model, Rhetorical Structure Theory and Segmented Discourse Representation Theory.This volume contains an introduction to these frameworks and the fundamental topics in research about discourse constraints. Thus, it should be accessible to specialists in the field as well as advanced graduate students and researchers from neighbouring areas. The volume is of interest to discourse linguists, psycholinguists, cognitive scientists, and computational linguists.
Constraints in discourse: An Introduction
The Right FrontierTroubles on the right frontier
The moving right frontier
Comparing FrameworksStrong generative capacity of rst, sdrt and discourse dependency dags
Rhetorical distance revisited: A parameterized approach
Underspecifid discourse representation
The Cognitive PerspectiveDependency precedes independence: Online evidence from discourse processing
Accessing discourse referents introduced in negated phrases: Evidence for accommodation?
Language Specifi PhenomenaComplex anaphors in discourse
The discourse functions of the present perfect
German right dislocation and aftrthought in discourse
A discourse-relational approach to continuation
German Vorfeld-filing as constraint interaction