@article{garnham-2021-people,
title = "How People Structure Representations of Discourse",
author = "Garnham, Alan",
editor = "Healey, Patrick and
Eugenio, Barbara Di and
Demberg, Vera and
Ginzburg, Jonathan and
Georgila, Kallirroi and
Zeldes, Amir and
Poesio, Massimo",
journal = "Dialogue {\&} Discourse",
volume = "12",
month = feb,
year = "2021",
address = "Chicago, Illinois, USA",
publisher = "University of Illinois Chicago",
url = "https://preview.aclanthology.org/new-venues/2021.dnd-12.10/",
doi = "10.5210/dad.2021.101",
pages = "1--20",
abstract = "Mental models or situation models include representations of people, but much of the literature about such models focuses on the representation of eventualities (events, states, and processes) or (small-scale) situations. In the well-known event-indexing model of Zwaan, Langston, and Graesser (1995), for example, protagonists are just one of five dimensions on which situation models are indexed. They are not given any additional special status. Consideration of longer narratives, and the ways in which readers or listeners relate to them, suggest that people have a more central status in the way we think about texts, and hence in discourse representations, Indeed, such considerations suggest that discourse representations are organised around (the representations of) central characters. The paper develops the idea of the centrality of main characters in representations of longer texts, by considering, among other things, the way information is presented in novels, with L'{\'E}ducation Sentimentale by Gustav Flaubert as a case study. Conclusions are also drawn about the role of representations of people in the representation of other types of text."
}Markdown (Informal)
[How People Structure Representations of Discourse](https://preview.aclanthology.org/new-venues/2021.dnd-12.10/) (Garnham, DND 2021)
ACL