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It has been a locus of debate in the literature whether the so-called unergative-unaccusative split among intransitive verbs is syntactically or semantically based. Previously unnoticed data in Japanese show that the distinction between unergatives and unaccusatives is fully determined on the basis of verbs' inherent lexical meanings. In order to make the contrast, it is not sufficient to postulate that subjects of unaccusatives are derived syntactically from underlying direct objects.
In this book, we have demonstrated how one can model a language’s morphological system with JudiLing, a computational implementation of the central ideas and algorithms of the DLM (Baayen et al., 2018c, 2019) in Julia. The core hypothesis underlying the Discriminative Lexicon Model is that the mental lexicon can be approximated well by simple end-to-end models, for comprehension starting with form and generating meaning, and conversely, for production, starting with meaning, and generating form.