Introduction
In psycholinguistic research, models of sentence processing prevail which explain human parsing preferences with a set of universal principles derived either from general features of the architecture of the human language processor (e.g., Frazier & Fodor, 1978; Konieczny, 1996), or universal features of grammar (e.g., Pritchett, 1992; Gorrell, 1995), or combinations of both (Gibson, 1991). These accounts usually see the human language processor as a modular subsystem (or a set of subsystems, e.g., Frazier, 1990a) of the cognitive machinery (Fodor, 1983). As Pickering, Crocker, & Clifton (this volume) point out, psycholinguists try to uncover the basic architectures and mechanisms of this module, or more pointedly, the natural laws of the human language processor. These laws, i.e., the basic principles of language processing, should be valid across individuals as well as across languages. The simplest interpretation of this approach to sentence processing implies that similar constructions should be parsed in similar ways irrespective of interindividual or interlingual differences.
This approach has been challenged by a series of experiments on relativeclause attachment in sentences like (1), whose results were first published by Cuetos and Mitchell (1988). Cuetos and Mitchell provided evidence for a marked preference to attach the relative clause to the first of the two potential hosts in Spanish, whereas in English, relative clauses were preferentially attached low.