Language users have access to several sources of information during the
build up of a meaningful construction. These include grammatical rules,
situational knowledge, and general world knowledge. A central role in
this process is played by the argument structure of verbs, which
establishes the syntactic and semantic relationships between arguments.
This book provides an overview of recent psycholinguistic and
theoretical investigations on the interplay between structural syntactic
relations and role semantics. The focus herein lies on the interaction
of case marking and word order with semantic prominence features, such
as animacy and definiteness. The interaction of these different sorts of
information is addressed from theoretical, time-insensitive, and
incremental perspectives, or a combination of these. Taking a broad
cross-linguistic perspective, this book bridges the gap between
theoretical and psycholinguistic approaches to argument structure.