MIT OpenCourseWare
  • OCW home
  • Course List
  • about OCW
  • Help
  • Feedback
  • Support MIT OCW

9.591J / 24.945J Language Processing, Fall 2004

Image of English phrase structure for a sentence.

English phrase structure for the sentence "The reporter that the senator attacked disliked the editor." (Image by Prof. Edward Gibson.)

Highlights of this Course

This course features an extensive reading list.

» View an older version of this course en Español or em Portugues courtesy of Universia. Please note that since our Spring 2005 publication, the translated version available from Universia may not have the most current content that is available on the MIT OCW site.

Course Description

This course is a seminar in real-time language comprehension. It considers models of sentence and discourse comprehension from the linguistic, psychology, and artificial intelligence literature, including symbolic and connectionist models. Topics include ambiguity resolution and linguistic complexity; the use of lexical, syntactic, semantic, pragmatic, contextual and prosodic information in language comprehension; the relationship between the computational resources available in working memory and the language processing mechanism; and the psychological reality of linguistic representations.
 

Staff

Instructor:
Prof. Edward Gibson

Course Meeting Times

Lectures:
One session / week
3 hours / session

Level

Graduate

Feedback

Send feedback about OCW or this course.