About the Book
Source: Wikia. Pages: 52. Chapters: Adele Goldberg, Allan Paivio, Alvin Liberman, Annette Karmiloff-Smith, Boicho Kokinov, Brian Butterworth, Carol Fowler, Charles J. Fillmore, Colin Cherry, David Kirsh, David Premack, David Rubin, Donald Norman, Donald Shankweiler, Douglas Hofstadter, Edwin Hutchins, Eleanor Rosch, Elizabeth Bates, Eve Sweetser, Fergus I. M. Craik, Geoffrey E. Hinton, Geoffrey Hinton, George A. Miller, George Lakoff, George Sperling, Gilles Fauconnier, Graham Hitch, Ignatius Mattingly, Isabelle Liberman, Jacques Mehler, James L McClelland, Jean Piaget, Jeffrey Elman, Jerry Fodor, John B. Carroll, John Bissell Carroll, John Morton, Joseph E. LeDoux, Keith Holyoak, Lawrence W. Barsalou, Leonard Talmy, Lera Boroditsky, Marcia K. Johnson, Mark H. Johnson, Mark Johnson, Marvin Minsky, Michael Gazzaniga, Michael Studdert-Kennedy, Michael Tomasello, Noam Chomsky, Olaf Sporns, Paul Smolensky, R. Duncan Luce, Randall Beer, Ray Jackendoff, Rodney Brooks, Roger Shepard, Ronald Langacker, Saul Sternberg, Stevan Harnad, Steven Pinker, Tim van Gelder, Walter Pitts, William Kaye Estes, Zenon Pylyshyn. Excerpt: Adele Eva Goldberg is a researcher in the field of linguistics. Since 2004, she has been a Professor in Linguistics, and an associated faculty in Psychology at Princeton University. From 1997-2004, she was an Associate Professor of Linguistics and the Beckman Institute at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC). She was also, from 1997 to 1998, Associate Professor of Linguistics at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD). Goldberg's research focus is on the psychology of language, including theoretical and experimental aspects of grammar and its representation, acquisition of form-function correspondences, and syntactic priming. Her works aim to illuminate parallels between language and other cognitive processes. She is one of the leading researchers in the framework of Construction Grammar, an alternative to mainstream generative g...