Open AccessBook
Formal Principles of Language Acquisition
Kenneth Wexler,Peter W. Culicover +1 more
- 01 Jan 1980
1.4K
TL;DR: The authors of this book have developed a rigorous and unified theory that opens the study of language learnability to discoveries about the mechanisms of language acquisition in human beings and has important implications for linguistic theory, child language research, and the philosophy of language.
read more
Abstract: The question of language learnability is central to modern linguistics. Yet, despite its importance, research into the problems of language learnability has rarely gone beyond the informal, commonsense intuitions that currently prevail among linguists and psychologists.By focusing their inquiry on formal language learnability theory--the interface of formal mathematical linguistics, linguistic theory and cognitive psychology--the authors of this book have developed a rigorous and unified theory that opens the study of language learnability to discoveries about the mechanisms of language acquisition in human beings. Their research has important implications for linguistic theory, child language research, and the philosophy of language."Formal Principles of Language Acquisition" develops rigorous mathematical methods for demonstrating the learnability of classes of grammars. It adapts the well-developed theories of transformational grammar to establish psychological motivation for a set of formal constraints on grammars sufficient for learnability. In addition, the research deals with such matters as the complex interaction between the mechanism of language learning and the learning environment, the empirical adequacy of the learnability constraints, feasibility and attainability of classes of grammars, the role of semantics in language learnability, and the adequacy of transformational grammars as models of human linguistic competence.This first serious and extended development of a formal and precise theory of language learnability will interest researchers in psychology and linguistics, and is recommended for use in graduate courses in language acquisition, linguistic theory, psycholinguistics, and mathematical linguistics, as well as interdisciplinary courses that deal with language learning, use, and philosophy.Contents: Methodological Considerations; Foundations of a Theory of Learnability; A Learnability Result for Transformational Grammar; Degree-2 Learnability; Linguistic Evidence for the Learnability Constraints; Function, Performance and Explanations; Further Issues: Linguistic Interaction, Invariance Principle, Open Problems; Notes, Bibliography, Index.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Socio‐perceptual bases for the emergence of language: An alternative to innatist approaches
TL;DR: Evidence from a series of studies investigating the social and perceptual bases of the emergence of the lexicon is marshaled to support and illustrate the nativist position.
75
Clitic doubling at the syntax-morphophonology interface
TL;DR: This article showed that clitic doubling in Bulgarian does not involve agreement, and that the clitic is a reduced articulation of the higher occurrence of a raised object, which is not the case in Bulgarian.
74
Rage against the machine: Evaluation metrics in the 21st century
TL;DR: The authors review the classic literature in generative grammar and Marr's three-level program for cognitive science to defend the Evaluation Metric as a psychological theory of language learning, focusing on language learning.
•Dissertation
Language -specific constraints on scope interpretation in first language acquisition
Takuya Goro
- 07 Aug 2007
TL;DR: This dissertation investigates the acquisition of language-specific constraints on scope interpretation by Japanese preschool children, and suggests that the impossibility of their non-adult interpretations are acquired by learning some independently observable properties of the language.
72
On Certain Properties of Pied-Piping
TL;DR: In this paper, an alternative theory based on Agree is proposed, arguing that an approach to pied-piping in terms of feature percolation is problematic under minimalist assumptions.
72
Related Papers (5)
Noam Chomsky
- 01 Jan 1981
Eric Wanner,Lila R. Gleitman +1 more
- 16 Sep 2009
John Robert Ross
- 01 Jan 1967
Noam Chomsky
- 01 Jan 1992