This Element presents a computational theory of syntactic variation that brings together (i) models of individual differences across distinct speakers, (ii) models of dialectal differences across distinct populations, and (iii) models of register differences across distinct contexts. This computational theory is based in Construction Grammar (CxG) because its usage-based representations can capture differences in productivity across multiple levels of abstraction. Drawing on corpora representing over 300 local dialects across fourteen countries, this Element undertakes three data-driven case-studies to show how variation unfolds across the entire grammar. These case-studies are reproducible given supplementary material that accompanies the Element. Rather than focus on discrete variables in isolation, we view the grammar as a complex system. The essential advantage of this computational approach is scale: we can observe an entire grammar across many thousands of speakers representing dozens of local populations.
1. Variation in a complex system; 2. Variation across individuals; 3. Variation across populations; 4. Variation across contexts; 5. Conclusions; References.
Tiago Timponi Torrent, Thomas Hoffmann, Arthur Lorenzi Almeida, Mark Turner, Tiago Timponi (Federal University of Juiz de Fora) Torrent, Thomas (Katholische Universitat Eichstatt-Ingolstadt / Hunan Normal University) Hoffmann, Arthur Lorenzi (Federal University of Juiz de Fora) Almeida, Mark (Case Western Reserve University) Turner
Tiago Timponi Torrent, Thomas Hoffmann, Arthur Lorenzi Almeida, Mark Turner, Tiago Timponi (Federal University of Juiz de Fora) Torrent, Thomas (Katholische Universitat Eichstatt-Ingolstadt / Hunan Normal University) Hoffmann, Arthur Lorenzi (Federal University of Juiz de Fora) Almeida, Mark (Case Western Reserve University) Turner
Rui P. Chaves, Paul Kay, Laura A. Michaelis, Rui P. (University of Buffalo) Chaves, Berkeley) Kay, Paul (University of California, Laura A. (University of Colorado Boulder) Michaelis