The Stirling Psychology of Language Conference was held in the
University of Stirling, 21-26 June 1976. 250 people attended the
conference and 70 papers were presented. The two volumes of Pro-
ceedings present a selection of papers from the conference reflect- ing
as far as possible the range of topics that were discussed. Volume 1 is
concerned exclusively with language acquisition. In recent years the
'centre of gravity' of acquisition research has shifted from syntactic
and phonological description to the amor- phous domains of semantics and
pragmatics. This shift is reflected in the two large sections (II and
III) devoted to these aspects of language development. In addition the
volume contains three smaller sections dealing with general problems of
acquisition theory, syntax and the development of comprehension, and
applied developmental psycholinguistics. Volume 2 contains a substantial
section of papers which stress the formal aspects of psycholinguistics:
these include papers in which artificial intelligence figures
prominently, papers which apply re- cent developments in syntax and
semantics to psycholinguistic prob- lems, and papers that are broadly
critical of the use psychologists have made of linguistic theories.
Volume 2 also contains a section dealing with the experimental study of
sentence comprehension and production, and there is a final section
concerned with phonology and its development.