Cognitive Corpus Linguistics: Five points of debate on current theory and methodology

Arppe, Antti;Gilquin, Gaëtanelle;Glynn, Dylan;Hilpert, Martin;Zeschel, Arne
(2010) Corpora — Vol. 5, n° 1, p. 1-27 (2010)

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Authors
  • Arppe, Antti
    Author
  • Author
  • Glynn, Dylan
    Author
  • Hilpert, Martin
    Author
  • Zeschel, Arne
    Author
Abstract
Within cognitive linguistics, there is an increasing awareness that the study of linguistic phenomena needs to be grounded in usage. Ideally, research in cognitive linguistics should be based on authentic language use, its results should be replicable, and its claims falsifiable. Consequently, more and more studies now turn to corpora as a source of data. While corpus-based methodologies have increased in sophistication, the use of corpus data is also associated with a number of unresolved problems. The study of cognition through off-line linguistic data is arguably indirect, even if such data fulfils desirable qualities such as being natural, representative, and plentiful. Several topics in this context stand out as particularly pressing matters. This discussion note addresses (1) converging evidence from corpora and experimentation, (2) whether corpora mirror psychological reality, (3) the theoretical value of corpus linguistic studies of 'alternations', (4) the relation of corpus linguistics and grammaticality judgments, and lastly (5) the nature of explanations in cognitive corpus linguistics. We do not claim to resolve these issues nor cover all possible angles; instead we strongly encourage reactions and further discussion.
Affiliations
  • Institution iconUCLouvainFIAL/GERM - Département d'études germaniques

Citations

Arppe, A., Gilquin, G., Glynn, D., Hilpert, M., & Zeschel, A. (2010). Cognitive Corpus Linguistics: Five points of debate on current theory and methodology. Corpora, 5(1), 1-27. https://doi.org/10.3366/cor.2010.0001 (Original work published 2010)