Skip navigation

Siva Kalyan

Qualifications

Bachelor of Asia-Pacific Studies (Honours (First Class), Japanese Linguistics), Australian National University, 2011

Thesis

Title: From "psychologically plausible" to "psychologically testable": Profile determinacy, focal prominence, and scanning in Cognitive Grammar

My thesis aims to show that the semantic descriptions of grammatical constructions proposed in Ronald Langacker's framework of Cognitive Grammar can be experimentally verified. In particular, I investigate four types of constructions:

  • Finite complementation (e.g. I know that she left); sentences of this type are presumed to denote the same event as the first verb (in this case, a state of 'knowing' rather than a process of 'leaving')
  • Three-participant clauses (e.g. She gave the boy a book/She gave a book to the boy); the first object in each construction is analysed as the secondary topic, and the second object as the tertiary topic
  • Existential constructions (e.g. A book is on the table/There is a book on the table); in the first clause-type, the topic is said to be the located object (the book), whereas in the second clause-type, the topic is said to be the "scope of attention" (the scene as a whole, including both the book and the table)
  • Non-finite clausal complements (e.g. She made him wipe the table, as opposed to She said he wiped the table); in the former, the denoted event is said to be "summarily scanned", i.e. visualised like a multiple-exposure photograph, as opposed to a video (as in the latter sentence, which exemplifies "sequential scanning")

I attempt to formulate these descriptions in psychological terms, and use a variety of experimental techniques (questionnaires, production experiments, and reaction-time studies) to test them. The goal is not simply to provide support for particular semantic analyses, but to provide a set of empirical methods by which such analyses may be reliably arrived at.

Supervisors

Prof. Ewa Dąbrowska (primary)
Dr Andriy Myachykov (secondary)
Dr James Street (tertiary)

Contact details

Faculty of Arts, Design & Social Sciences
Northumbria University
The Glenamara Centre
Lipman Building, room 127
Newcastle upon Tyne
NE1 8ST
siva.kalyan@northumbria.ac.uk





a sign in front of a crowd
+

Northumbria Open Days

Open Days are a great way for you to get a feel of the University, the city of Newcastle upon Tyne and the course(s) you are interested in.

a person sitting at a table using a laptop
+
NU World Virtual Tours
+

Virtual Tour

Get an insight into life at Northumbria at the click of a button! Come and explore our videos and 360 panoramas to immerse yourself in our campuses and get a feel for what it is like studying here using our interactive virtual tour.

Latest News and Features

a map showing areas of ice melt in Greenland
S2Cool project lead Dr Muhammad Wakil Shahzad
The Converted Flat in 2049, by the Interaction Research Studio, is one of seven period rooms built as part of the Real Rooms project which opened in July at the Museum of the Home in London.
The UK Centre for Polar Observation and Modelling (CPOM), based at Northumbria University, has been awarded over £400,000 by the European Space Agency to investigate tipping points in the Earth’s icy regions with a focus on the Antarctic. Photo by Professor Andrew Shepherd.
Nature Awards Inclusive Health Research
Some members of History’s editorial team (from left to right): Daniel Laqua (editor-in-chief), Katarzyna Kosior (reviews editor), Lewis Kimberley (editorial assistant), Charotte Alston (deputy editor) and Henry Miller (online editor).
More news

Back to top