Verb Argument Construction Project
Using computational corpus analysis and experimental data this project aims to produce an extensive inventory of English Verb Argument constructions and to quantify aspects related to the frequency, semantic coherence and speaker accessibility of verbs in constructions.
We are working on a project to build an inventory of a large number of English verb argument constructions (VACs) using the COBUILD Verb Grammar Patterns descriptions and tools from computational and corpus linguistics. The project has two components: (1) a computational corpus analysis of corpora to retrieve instances of the full range of VACs and (2) psycholinguistic experiments to measure speaker knowledge of these VACs through the verbs selected.
For each VAC, such as the pattern V(erb) across n(oun phrase):
of these VACs in the human mind. We show how the statistical factors in our inventory predict this.
References
Francis, G., Hunston, S., & Manning, E. (Eds.). (1996). Grammar Patterns 1: Verbs. The COBUILD Series. London: Harper Collins.
Goldberg, A. E. (2003). Constructions: a new theoretical approach to language. Trends in Cognitive Science, 7, 219-224.
Goldberg, A. E. (2006). Constructions at work: The nature of generalization in language. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Zipf, G. K. (1949). Human behaviour and the principle of least effort: An introduction to human ecology. Cambridge, MA: Addison-Wesley.
O’Donnell, M.B. & Ellis, N.C. (2010). Towards an Inventory of English Verb Argument Constructions. Paper presented at the Workshop on Extracting and Using Constructions in Computational Linguistics, Human Language Technologies: The 11th Annual Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics, June 2010.
O’Donnell, M.B., Römer, U. & Ellis, N.C. (2011). What do people know about verbs in constructions? Combining corpus and psycholinguistic evidence. Paper to be presented at Alabama symposium on on “Exploring the Boundaries and Applications of Corpus Linguistics”, University of Alabama, AL, April 2011.
O’Donnell, M.B., Römer, U. & Ellis, N.C. (2011). Learning verb-argument constructions: New perspectives from corpus and psycholinguistic analyses. Paper to be presented at ISLE 2 (2nd triennial conference of the International Society for the Linguistics of English), Boston University, MA, June 2011.
O’Donnell, M.B., Römer, U. & Ellis, N.C. (2011). Exploring Zipfian distributions in English verb argument constructions: Corpus and psycholinguistic evidence. Paper presented at Corpus Linguistics 2011, Birmingham, UK, July 2011.
Ellis, N.C. & M.B. O’Donnell (Forthcoming). Statistical construction learning: Does a Zipfian problem space ensure robust language learning? In J. Williams & J. Rebuschat (eds.) Statistical Learning and Language Acquisition, Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
O’Donnell, M.B. & N.C. Ellis (2010). Towards an Inventory of English Verb Argument Constructions. Proceedings of Workshop on Extracting and Using Constructions in Computational Linguistics NAACL HLT2010: 9-16.
If you are an instructor at the University of Michigan and would like to learn more about corpus analysis and how to use corpora with your students, you may be interested in joining our Corpus Analysis Group.
The MCL team frequently provide introductions to corpus analysis and training in the use of corpus tools for scholars visiting the ELI and also in writing classes offered in the English Language Institute.
This is a project to explore the factors involved in the measurement of repeated word sequences in language sampled from a range of corpora.
Using computational corpus analysis and experimental data this project aims to produce an extensive inventory of English Verb Argument constructions and to quantify aspects related to the frequency, semantic coherence and speaker accessibility of verbs in constructions.
These projects illustrate the range of research being carried out by members of the MCL team.
This page lists a number of useful corpus tools and corpora you can search online to retrieve examples of real spoken and written English.
On these pages you will find information about conferences members of the MCL team presented at or helped organize.