What drives syntactic computation?
Formal features (FFs) figure prominently in various areas of syntactic theorizing. Displacement/Internal Merge is widely held to be effected by FFs or their properties (strength, EPP, discourse‐related features, etc.). Similarly, External Merge is often taken to be controlled by FFs, e.g. to encode selectional properties of heads. However, this reliance on seemingly arbitrary triggers and the “Last Resort” character of syntactic computation in general is regarded with skepticism by many. A growing body of research emphasizes the role of externalization (PF) and interpretation (LF) in sanctioning syntactic operations. This Special Collection explores the question to what extent FFs can be replaced with more principled explanations and where, if at all, they may be indispensable. The Collection is based on the workshop “What drives syntactic computation? Alternatives to formal features,” held as part of the March 2015 Annual Meeting of the German Linguistics Society at the University of Leipzig.
Guest Editors: Dennis Ott & Radek Šimík
Articles
Against information structure heads: A relational analysis of German scrambling
Volker Struckmeier
Also a part of:
What the EPP and comp-trace effects have in common: Constraining silent elements at the edge
Thomas McFadden and Sandhya Sundaresan
Also a part of:
Collections
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                Data-driven analyses of ellipsis (mis)matches 
            
        
            
                Neoconstructionist perspectives on form and meaning composition 
            
        
            
                On the nature of agents 
            
        
            
                Change of state expressions 
            
        
            
                The syntax of argument structure alternations across frameworks 
            
        
            
                Thematic formatives and linguistic theory 
            
        
            
                Multivaluation in agreement 
            
        
            
                GLOWing Papers 2021 
            
        
            
                Speaker, Addressee, and Social Relation 
            
        
            
                Non-Conservativity with Precise Proportions 
            
        
            
                GLOWing Papers 2020 
            
        
            
                The grammar of Agree(ment) and Reference 
            
        
            
                Meaning-driven selectional restrictions in the domain of clause embedding 
            
        
            
                The acquisition of the syntactic tree. Insights from cartography 
            
        
            
                GLOWing Papers 2019 
            
        
            
                Definiteness and referentiality 
            
        
            
                Contrastive, given, new - encoding varieties of topic and focus 
            
        
            
                New perspectives on the NP/ DP debate 
            
        
            
                Micro-variation in subject realization and interpretation 
            
        
            
                Subject Extraction 
            
        
            
                Information structure and syntactic change 
            
        
            
                Experimental Approaches to Ellipsis 
            
        
            
                GLOWing Papers 2018 
            
        
            
                Formal Approaches to Dialectal Syntax 
            
        
            
                Rhotics in Phonological Theory 
            
        
            
                Resolving conflicts within and across modules 
            
        
            
                The Grammar of Dispositions 
            
        
            
                Unergative predicates. Architecture and variation 
            
        
            
                Beyond descriptive and metalinguistic negation 
            
        
            
                Participles: Form, Use and Meaning  
            
        
            
                The interpretation of the mass-count distinction across languages and populations 
            
        
            
                The Internal and External Syntax of Adverbial Clauses 
            
        
            
                Individuals, Communities, and Sound Change 
            
        
            
                Motivating Form in Morpho-syntax 
            
        
            
                Quantifier Scope 
            
        
            
                Acquisition of Quantification 
            
        
            
                Probabilistic grammars 
            
        
            
                Prosody and constituent structure 
            
        
            
                Suspended Affixation 
            
        
            
                *ABA 
            
        
            
                Marginal Contrasts 
            
        
            
                Perspective Taking 
            
        
            
                Focus concord constructions in Japanese and other languages 
            
        
            
                Headedness in Phonology 
            
        
            
                Partitives 
            
        
            
                Internally-Headed Relative Clauses 
            
        
            
                What drives syntactic computation? 
            
        
            
                Palatalization