1: Frederick J. Newmeyer and Laurel B. Preston: Introduction
2: John A. Hawkins: Major Contributions from Formal Linguistics to
the Complexity Debate
3: David Gil: Sign languages, Creoles, and the Development of
Predication
4: Ray Jackendoff and Eva Wittenberg: What You Can Say Without
Syntax: A hierarchy of grammatical complexity
5: Ljiljana Progovac: Degrees of Complexity in Syntax: A view from
evolution
6: Theresa Biberauer, Ian Roberts, Michelle Sheehan, and Anders
Holmberg: Complexity in comparative Syntax: The view from modern
parametric theory
7: Andreas Trotzke and Jan-Wouter Zwart: The Complexity of Narrow
Syntax: Minimalism, representational economy, and simplest
merge
8: Peter W. Culicover: Constructions, Complexity, and Word Order
Variation
9: Kaius Sinnemäki: Complexity Trade-offs: A case study
10: Daniel Ross: The Importance of Exhaustive Description in
Measuring Linguistic Complexity: The case of English try and
pseudocoordination
11: Steven Moran and Damián Blasi: Cross-linguistic Comparison of
Complexity Measures in Phonological Systems
12: Lisa Matthewson: The Measurement of Semantic Complexity: How to
get by if your language lacks generalized quantifiers
13: Cristiano Chesi and ANdrea Moro: Computational Complexity in
the Brain
14: Lise Menn and Cecily Jill Duffield: Looking for a 'Gold
Standard' to Measure language Complexity: What psycholinguistics
and neurolinguistics can (and cannot) offer to formal
linguistics
References
Index
Frederick J. Newmeyer specializes in syntax and the history of
linguistics and has as his current research program the attempt to
synthesize the results of formal and functional linguistics. He was
Secretary-Treasurer of the Linguistic Society of America (LSA) from
1989 to 1994 and its President in 2002. He has been elected Fellow
of the LSA and the American Association for the Advancement of
Science. In 2011 he received a Mellon Foundation Fellowship for
Emeritus
Faculty.
Laurel B. Preston is a graduate student in the Department of
Linguistics at the University of Washington, Seattle. Her research
interests include temporal semantics, with particular attention to
the temporal interpretation of nouns, and adult second language
acquisition. Her current work investigates poverty-of-the-stimulus
problems in second language acquisition.
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