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CSLI PublicationsCSLI Publications reports new developments in the study of language, information, logic, and computation. We publish books, lecture notes, monographs, technical reports, working papers, and conference proceedings. Our aim is to make new results, ideas, and approaches available as quickly as possible. See also about the research center, Center for the Study of Language and Information (CSLI). Available Now! Semantic Properties of Diagrams and Their Cognitive Potentials by Atsushi Shimojima
Why are diagrams sometimes so useful, facilitating our understanding and thinking, while at other times they can be unhelpful and even misleading? Drawing on a comprehensive survey of modern research in philosophy, logic, artificial intelligence, cognitive psychology, and graphic design, Semantic Properties of Diagrams and Their Cognitive Potentials reveals the systematic reasons for this dichotomy, showing that the cognitive functions of diagrams are rooted in the characteristic ways they carry information. In analyzing the logical mechanisms behind the relative efficacy of diagrammatic representation, Atsushi Shimojima provides deep insight into the crucial question: What makes a diagram a diagram?
Forthcoming December 2015! Computers in Education: A Half-Century of Innovation Patrick Suppes and Robert Smith
Described by the New York Times as a visionary “pioneer in computerized learning,” Patrick Suppes (19222014) and his many collaborators at Stanford University conducted research on the development, commercialization, and use of computers in education from 1963 to 2013. Computers in Education synthesizes this wealth of scholarship into a single succinct volume that highlights the profound interconnections of technology in education. By capturing the great breadth and depth of this research, this book offers an accessible introduction to Suppes' striking work.
Now Available! Predicative Constructions: From the Freegean to a Montagovian Treatment Frank van Eynde
Frank van Eynde develops a treatment in line with the Quine-Montague analysis of the English copula. It is based on the assumption that the syntactic and semantic structure of predicative constructions are homomorphous and it is cast in the Typed Feature Structure of Head-Driven Phrase Structure Grammar. Since this approach is new, it is motivated extensively, not only with the classical qualitative weighing of pros and cons but also with detailed quantitative investigations of treebanks.
Available Now! Japanese/Korean Linguistics, Vol. 22 edited by Mikio Giriko, Naonori Nagaya, Akiko Takemura, and Timothy J. Vance
Japanese and Korean are typologically similar, with linguistic phenomena in one often having counterparts in the other. The Japanese/Korean Linguistics Conference provides a forum for research, particularly through comparative study, of both languages. The papers in this volume are from the twenty-second conference, which was held at the National Institute for Japanese Language and Linguistics. They include essays on the phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, historical linguistics, discourse analysis, prosody, and psycholinguistics of both languages. Such comparative studies deepen our understanding of both languages and will be a useful reference for students and scholars in either field.
Available Now! Automaton Theories of Human Sentence Comprehension John T. Hale
Different kinds of grammars may actually be used in models of perceptual processing. By relating grammars to cognitive architecture, John T. Hale shows step-by-step how incremental parsing works and how specific learning rules might lead to frequency-sensitive preferences. Along the way, this book reconsiders garden-pathing, the parallel/serial distinction and information-theoretical complexity metrics, such as surprisal. This book is a must for cognitive scientists of language.
Available Now! Language and the Creative Mind Mike Borkent, Barbara Dancygier, Jennifer Hinnell
This volume brings together papers from the 11th Conceptual Structure,
Discourse and Language Conference, held in Vancouver in May 2012. In
the last few years, the cognitive study of language has begun to
examine the interaction between language and other embodied
communicative modalities, such as gesture, while at the same time
expanding the traditional limits of linguistic and cognitive enquiry
into creative domains such as music, literature, and visual
images. Papers in this collection show how the study of language paves
the way for these new areas of investigation. They bring issues of
multimodal communication to the attention of linguists, while also
looking through and beyond language into various domains of human
creativity. This refreshed view of the relations across various
communicative domains will be important not only to linguists, but
also to all those interested in the creative potential of the human
mind.
Available Now! What Is Said and What Is Not Carlo Penco and Filippo Domaneschi
This volume contains essays that explore explicit and implicit
communication through linguistic research. Taking as a framework Paul Grice's
theories on “what is said,” the contributors explore a number of areas, including:
the boundary between semantics and pragmatics; the concept of implicit
communication; the idea of the logical form of our assertions; the notion
of conventional meaning; the phenomenon of deixis, which refers to when an
utterance require context in order to be understood fully; the treatment
of definite descriptions; and the different kinds of pragmatic processes.
Available now! The Interaction of Tone with Voicing and Foot Structure: Evidence from Kera Phonetics and Phonology Mary D. Pearce
This book investigates the topics of tone, vowel harmony, and metrical
structure, with special reference to Kera, a Chadic language spoken in
Chad and Cameroon. Kera is a tone language where a change in the pitch of
the word can make a difference to its meaning. Drawing on a decade of
experience living and working with the Kera, Mary D. Pearce looks at both
the phonetics and phonology to examine how tone interacts with the vowel
quality and rhythm of the language. The implications arising from this
research are relevant for phonologists and Africanists far beyond the
boundaries of Chad and should be useful to anyone working on languages
with interesting tonal and rhythmic properties.
Available Now! Japanese/Korean Linguistics, Vol. 20 edited by Bjarke Frellesvig and Peter Sells
Japanese and Korean are typologically similar, with linguistic phenomena
in one often having counterparts in the other. The Japanese/Korean
Linguistics Conference provides a forum for research, particularly through
comparative study, of both languages. This volume includes essays on the
phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, historical linguistics,
discourse analysis, prosody, and psycholinguistics of both languages. This
volume will be a useful tool for any researcher or student in either
field.
Available Now! Concreteness in Grammar: The Noun Class Systems of the Arapesh Languages Lise M. Dobrin
Based on an exhaustive search of published sources and the
author's firsthand fieldwork, Concreteness in Grammar explores the
role of phonological form in the noun class systems of the Arapesh
languages spoken in Papua New Guinea. Linguists have long known that
from plays a critical role alongside semantics in the classification
of lexical items. In Arapesh, virtually every possible final ending
of a noun is represented in the paradigm of noun class and agreement
markers, reflecting an interpenetraion of sound structure and
grammar that many would disallow as wildly unconstrained. In this
book, Lise Dobrin describes these formal patterns in order to reveal
their naturalness and elegance, establishing their place in a
typology of noun class systems and drawing out their significance
for theories of grammatical architecture.
A rigorous study of an endangered language, Concreteness
in Grammar revisits the definition of a morpheme and looks at
unusual language patterns to reveal the naturalness of grammar.
Available now! Individual Difference in Online Computer-based Learning: Gifted and Other Diverse Populations Patrick Suppes In 1894 John Dewey established his experimental laboratory school at the University of Chicago, with a focus on teaching each student according to their individual differences. This concept indicated a shift away from the emphasis on communal, classroom teaching, which marked educational practices in the nineteenth century during the advent of widely available public education.
With the introduction of computer-based online instruction in schools,
curricula are able to be fully informed by individual difference, subtly
and quickly tracking students' progress. In these courses, teachers play the role
of troubleshooters instead of lecturers. Individual Differences examines a
large number of studies on computer-based and online instruction, with
special attention paid to gifted students in the fields of mathematics,
science, technology, and engineering. Other chapters also focus on a wide
variety of student populations: deaf students, American Indian rural
students, and underachieving, impoverished students.
Available Now! Formal Methods and Empirical Practices: Conversations with Patrick Suppes Roberta Ferrario and Viola Schiaffonati
The philosopher Patrick Suppes has developed a unique and influential
approach to studying the foundations of science—he combines an
understanding of the main principles of scientific theories in
axiomatic terms and formal models with a hands-on approach. While
moving the study of the philosophy of science out of the parlor and
into the lab, he often comes up with original results from the
psychology of learning to the theory of measurement and quantum
mechanics. This book searches for a common thread in Suppes's
multifaceted work through a series of conversations with the man
himself and illuminates many of the more challenging aspects of his
philosophy.
Available Now! Identity, Language, and Mind edited by Albert Newen and Raphael van Riel
As one of the world's most eminent living philosophers, John Perry has
covered a remarkable breadth of subjects in his published work,
including semantics, indexicality, self-knowledge, personal
identity, and consciousness. Looking particularly at the way in
which he deals with issues of self, communication, and reality, this
volume is organized in seven chapters that highlight a different
aspect of Perry's work on the intersection of these subjects. A
fundamental work for students and scholars, Identity, Language, and
Mind explores questions that are not only essential in understanding
Perry's writings, but also contemporary philosophy as a whole.
Available Now! Aquaintance, Knowledge, and Logic: New Essays on Bertrand Russell's The Problems of Philosophy Edited by Donovan Wishon and Bernard Linsky
Bertrand Russell, the recipient of the 1950 Nobel Prize for Literature, was one of the most distinguished, influential, and prolific philosophers of the twentieth century. Acquaintance, Knowledge, and Logic brings together ten new essays on Russell-s best-known work, The Problems of Philosophy. These essays, by some of the foremost scholars of his life and works, reexamine Russell's famous distinction between “knowledge by acquaintance” and “knowledge by description,” his developing views about our knowledge of physical reality, and his views about our knowledge of logic, mathematics, and other abstract matters. In addition, this volume includes an editors' introduction, which summarizes Russell's influential book, presents new biographical details about how and why Russell wrote it, and highlights its continued significance for contemporary philosophy.
Available Now! Foundations and Methods from Mathematics to Neuroscience: Essays Inspired by Patrick Suppes edited by Colleen E. Crangle, Adolfo García de la Sienra, and Helen E. Longino
Patrick Suppes and his peers explore a diverse array of topics including the relationship between science and philosophy; the philosophy of physics; problems in the foundations of mathematics; theory of measurement, decision theory, and probability; the foundations of economics and political theory; psychology, language, and the philosophy of language; Suppes's most recent research in neurobiology; and the alignment (or misalignment) of method and policy.
Forthcoming September 2015! Perspectives from the Disciplines: Stanford Online High School Jeffrey Scarborough and Raymond Ravaglia
In this companion volume to Bricks and Mortar, Jeffrey Scarborough and Raymond Ravaglia present a series of essays written by senior instructors and division heads at the Stanford Online High School (SOHS). Written from the perspective of the online-learning practitioner, these essays discuss in detail the challenges of teaching particular disciplines, accomplishing particular pedagogical objectives, and fostering the habits of mind characteristic of students who have received deep education in a given discipline. Perspectives from the Disciplines also examines counseling, student services, and student life viewpoints as it discusses how a truly international community has been fostered at SOHS, and how SOHS's student relationships are in many ways deeper and more intimate than those found in traditional secondary schools. Available Now! Japanese/Korean Linguistics, Vol. 21 Edited by Seungho Nam, Heejeong Ko, and Jongho Jun
The Japanese/Korean Linguistics Conference is a site for research on Japanese and Korean in a variety of areas, as well as comparative research on similarities and differences between the two languages. The papers included in this volume are from the 21st Japanese/Korean Linguistics Conference, which was held at Seoul National University. The contributions include studies in syntax, semantics, phonology, prosody, psycholinguistics, dialects, discourse, functional linguistics, and the the first and second language acquisition. This volume deepens our understanding of both languages and provide a useful reference for students and scholars in these fields.
Available Now! Bricks and Mortar: The Making of a Real Education at the Stanford Online Highschool Jeffrey Scarborough and Raymond Ravaglia
This volume shows how a group of onlinelearning believers bult the best high school in the world without laying a single brick: the Stanford Online High School (SOHS). By chronicling SOHS's distinctive approach to curriculum, gifted education, school community over SOHS's first seven years, Bricks and Mortar makes the case that the dynamic use of technology and the best traditional methodologies in education are not, in fact, mutually exclusive. Indeed, while SOHS has redefined what is possible online, a great education is ultimately the product of an interactive community of teachers and students.
Available Now! Descriptive Typology and Linguistic Theory: A study in the morphosyntax of relative clauses Farrell Ackerman and Irina Nikolaeva
Descriptive grammarians and typologists often encounter unusual
constructions or unfamiliar variants of otherwise familiar construction
types. Many of these phenomena are puzzling from the perspective of
linguistic theories: they neither predict nor, arguably, provide the tools
to insightfully describe them. This book analyzes an unusual type of
relative clause found in numerous related and unrelated languages of
Eurasia. While providing a detailed case study of Tundra Nenets, it
broadens this inquiry into a detailed typological exploration of this relative
clause type. The authors argue that an understanding of this construction
requires exploring the (type of) grammar system in which it occurs in
order to identify the (set of) independent constructions that motivate its
existence. The resulting insights into grammar organization illustrate
the usefulness of a construction-theoretic syntax and morphology informed
by a developmental systems perspective for the understanding of complex
grammatical phenomena.
Available Now! The Core and the Periphery: Data-Driven Perspectives on Syntax inspired by Ivan A. Sag edited by Philip Hofmeister and Elisabeth Norcliffe
The Core and the Periphery is a collection of papers inspired by the
linguistics career of Ivan A. Sag (1949–2013), written to commemorate his
many contributions to the field. Sag was professor of linguistics at
Stanford University from 1979 to 2013; served as the director of the
Symbolic Systems Program from 2005 to 2009; authored, co-authored, or
edited fifteen volumes on linguistics; and was at the forefront of
non-transformational approaches to syntax. Reflecting the breadth of s
theoretical interests and approaches to linguistic problems, the papers
collected here tackle a range of grammar-related issues using corpora,
intuitions, and laboratory experiments. They are united by their use of
and commitment to rich datasets and share the perspective that the best
theories of grammar attempt to account for the full diversity and
complexity of language data.
Available Now! New Studies in Weak Arithmetics Edited by Patrick Cégielski, Charalampos Cornaros, and Costas Dimitracopoulos
The field of weak arithmetics is application of logical methods to Number
Theory, developed by mathematicians, philosophers, and theoretical
computer scientists. In this volume, after a general presentation of weak
arithmetics, the following topics are studied: the properties of integers
of a real closed field equipped with exponentiation; conservation results
for the induction schema restricted to first-order formulas with a finite
number of alternations of quantifiers; a survey on a class of tools,
called pebble games, used in finite model theory; the fact that reals e
and π have approximations expressed by first-order formulas using
bounded quantifiers; properties on infinite pictures depending on the
universe of sets used; a language that simulates in a sufficiently nice
manner all algorithms of a certain restricted class; the logical
complexity of the axiom of infinity in some variants of set theory without
the axiom of foundation; and the complexity to determine whether a trace
is included in another one.
Available Now! Attitudes De Se: Linguistics, Epistemology, Metaphysics edited by Neil Feit and Alessandro Capone In English, we use the word “I” to express thoughts that we have about ourselves, and we use the reflexive pronouns “himself” and “herself” to attribute such thoughts to others. Philosophers and linguists call such thoughts, and the statements we use to express them, de se. De se thoughts and statements, although they appear often in our
day-to-day lives, pose a series of challenging problems for both linguists
and philosophers. This interdisciplinary volume examines the structure of
de se thought, various issues concerning the semantics and pragmatics of
our discourse about it, and also what it reveals about how humans think
about themselves and the world around them.
Online From Quirky Case to Representing Space: Papers in Honor of Annie Zaenen edited by Tracy Holloway King and Valeria de Paiva Annie Zaenen's broad influence on the field of linguistics ranges from details of lexical representation to the architecture of formal linguistic theories. The fifteen contributed papers in this volume reflect three major themes from her research: Mapping from arguments to syntax; Views on syntax; Semantics and beyond. Available Now! Sign-Based Construction Grammar edited by Hans C. Boas and Ivan A. Sag
This volume provides a general overview of Sign-Based Construction
Grammar (SBCG), the synthesis of Berkeley Construction Grammar and
Head-Driven Phrase Structure Grammar that emerged from a decade of
interactions between Ivan Sag, Charles Fillmore, Paul Kay and Laura
Michaelis. The papers collected here also demonstrate the analytic
value of SBCG for a variety of linguistic problems—some old
chestnuts, others untouched by ‘mainstream’ theories.
Available Now! Three Dialogues between Hylas and Philonous George Berkeley (Edited, with an Introduction by David Hilbert and John Perry)
Deeply original, inspiring to some, abhorrent to others, George Berkeley's
philosophy of immaterialism is still influential three hundred years after
the publication of his most widely read book, Three Dialogues Between
Hylas and Philonous. Berkeley published the Dialogues because of the
unenthusiastic reception of his Principles of Human Knowledge in 1710. He
hoped the use of the dialogue format would win a more favorable hearing,
but unfortunately for Berkeley, the response was every bit as scathing as
the reception of his previous work. In recent decades, In recent decades,
Berkeley's work has been recognized as an excellent introduction to the English
philosophy of the eighteenth century, and to philosophy in general. This
edition of the dialogues is accessibly organized by David Hilbert and John
Perry.
Available Now! Reference and Reflexivity, 2nd edition John Perry
In this volume John Perry develops his “reflexive-referential” account
of indexicals, demonstratives, proper names, and other fragments of
language. On issues of meaning and reference, the philosophy of
language in the twentieth century was shaped by two competing
traditions, descriptivist and referentialist. The referentialist
tradition holds that indexicals, demonstratives, and proper names
contribute content that involves individuals without identifying
conditions on them. In contrast, the descriptivist tradition holds
that referential content does not explain all of the identifying
conditions conveyed by names, demonstratives, and indexicals.
Perry's theory, borrowing ideas from both traditions as well as from
Burks and Reichenbach, diagnoses the problems as stemming from a
fixation on a certain kind of content, coined “referential” or
“fully incremental” content. He reveals a coherent and structured
family of contents—from reflexive contents that place conditions on
their actual utterance to fully incremental contents that place
conditions only on the objects of reference—reconciling the
legitimate insights of both the referentialist and descriptivist
traditions.
CSLI StandardsNew Edition! Language, Proof and Logic (second edition) Dave Barker-Plummer, Jon Barwise and John Etchemendy
This textbook/software package is a self-contained introduction to
the basic concepts of logic: language, truth, argument, consequence,
proof and counterexample. No prior study of logic is assumed, and, it
is appropriate for introductory and second courses in logic.
The unique
on-line grading service almost instantly grades solutions to hundred of
computer exercises. It is specially devised to be used by philosophy
instructors in a way that is useful to undergraduates of philosophy,
computer science, mathematics, and linguistics.
Relevant Linguistics, 2nd Edition, Revised and Expanded: An Introduction to the Structure and Use of English for Teachers
by Paul Justice.
The revised and expanded edition of Relevant Linguistics provides a
straightforward, accessible introduction to the basics of English
phonetics, phonology, morphology, morphophonology, and syntax for
education students and all non-linguistics majors.
Syntactic Theory, 2nd edition: A Formal Introduction by Ivan A. Sag, Thomas Wasow, and Emily M. Bender.
The second edition of Syntactic Theory: A Formal Introduction expands
and improves on a truly unique introductory syntax textbook. Like the
first edition, it focuses on the development of precisely formulated
grammars whose empirical predictions can be directly tested.
Please note: Our books are distributed by The University of Chicago Press. Please see our order page for order information. Visit our catalog to view a chronologically ordered guide to all our publications, or use the new books area to browse our most recent publications. See also our online publications. You may also see a complete, one page summary of all our publications on the series page. Contact us or search our site in any field. |
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