This book offers an updated introduction to Relational Network Theory (RNT), a neurocognitive model of language compatible with systemic-functional tenets. It describes and illustrates the logical types of relations found in a linguistic network. Part I traces the evolution of RNT from the 1960s to the present, highlighting its systemic and stratificational origins, introducing its main notational devices, and identifying successive theoretical milestones (from structural, to operational, to neurocognitive considerations). Part II offers an unprecedented collection of case studies showing descriptive applications of RNT. The studies deal with varied linguistic phenomena in different languages (phonological patterns in Russian, morphological systems in Polish and Spanish, pronouns and nouns in English discourse, speech errors in English and Polish). The book is prefaced by Michael Halliday and includes a recent interview with Sydney Lamb, the main developer of the theory. Its didactic style and descriptive rigor render it useful for both linguistics students and professional linguists.
Adolfo M. Garcia specializes in the neuroscience of language. He is Scientific Director of the Laboratory of Experimental Psychology and Neuroscience at the Institute of Cognitive Neurology (INECO, Argentina). William J. Sullivan teaches in the Instytut Anglistyki, Uniwersytet Marii Curie-Sklodowskiej, Poland.Sarah Tsiang is Associate Professor in the Department of English at Eastern Kentucky University.
Title: An Introduction to Relational Network Theory: History, Principles and Descriptive Applications (Equinox Textbooks & Surveys in Linguistics)
Author: Sarah Tsiang,Adolfo Garcia
ISBN: 9781781792612
Binding:
Publisher: Equinox Publishing Ltd
Publication Date: 2017-04-14
Number of Pages: 248
Weight: 0.4541 kg
'Up till today, as far as I am aware, relational network theory has not been examined in detail from the point of view of current scholarship in neuroscience. The reason the present book is so timely is that it will provide another mode of access to his theory, for those who would be able to approach it with the required specialist knowledge.' From the Foreword by M.A.K. Halliday