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Formal Principles of Language Acquisition
Kenneth Wexler,Peter W. Culicover +1 more
- 01 Jan 1980
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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.
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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.
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Citations
•Dissertation
Baldwinian accounts of language evolution
Hajime Yamauchi
- 01 Jan 2004
TL;DR: A new type of mechanism, called "Baldwinian Niche Construction (BNC), is developed that has a rich explanatory power and can potentially over¬ come this bewildering problem of the Baldwin effect.
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•Dissertation
The importance of being a complement : CED-effects revisited
Johannes Jurka
- 01 Jan 2010
TL;DR: Experiments in English indicate that NP-subextraction yields the familiar subject/object asymmetry, while the contrast largely disappears when PPs are fronted, and results show that ECM and passive predicates do not improve the acceptability of the extraction out of subjects.
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Effects of Processing on the Acceptability of "Frozen" Extraposed Constituents
TL;DR: This paper showed that the gradient pattern of acceptability associated with such examples is better explained in terms of processing complexity, and concluded that a grammar of unbounded dependencies in English does not require a frozen structure constraint for the explanation of these cases.
Morphological universals and diachrony
Stephen R. Anderson
- 01 Jan 2005
TL;DR: The authors conclude that what we find in language is only partially explained by what is natural, and that cognitive capacity for language cannot be based simply on generalizations about what they find in the languages of the world, or on what can be grounded in some other domain, such as phonetics.
31
L2 Grammatical Gender in a Complex Morphological System: The Case of German.
Patti Spinner,Alan Juffs +1 more
TL;DR: This paper examined the longitudinal production data of an early naturalistic Li-Italian and Li-Turkish learner who are acquiring German and concluded that these learners' errors in the gender of German nouns are the result of at least four factors: inadequate lexical learning, mapping difficulty, processing pressure, and parsing errors that cause the paradigm to be inadequately learned.
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