Title
A selectionist theory of language acquisition
Abstract
This paper argues that developmental patterns in child language be taken seriously in computational models of language acquisition, and proposes a formal theory that meets this criterion. We first present developmental facts that are problematic for statistical learning approaches which assume no prior knowledge of grammar, and for traditional learnability models which assume the learner moves from one UG-defined grammar to another. In contrast, we view language acquisition as a population of grammars associated with "weights", that compete in a Darwinian selectionist process. Selection is made possible by the variational properties of individual grammars; specifically, their differential compatibility with the primary linguistic data in the environment. In addition to a convergence proof, we present empirical evidence in child language development, that a learner is best modeled as multiple grammars in co-existence and competition.
Year
DOI
Venue
1999
10.3115/1034678.1034744
ACL
Keywords
DocType
Volume
learner move,developmental pattern,child language development,present developmental fact,ug-defined grammar,language acquisition,multiple grammar,child language,darwinian selectionist process,individual grammar,selectionist theory,empirical evidence,computer model
Conference
P99-1
ISBN
Citations 
PageRank 
1-55860-609-3
3
1.81
References 
Authors
2
1
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Charles D. Yang155.14