Language learning from positive evidence, reconsidered A simplicity-based approach

Authors
Publication date 01-2013
Journal Topics in Cognitive Science
Volume | Issue number 5 | 1
Pages (from-to) 35-55
Number of pages 21
Organisations
  • Interfacultary Research - Institute for Logic, Language and Computation (ILLC)
Abstract

Children learn their native language by exposure to their linguistic and communicative environment, but apparently without requiring that their mistakes be corrected. Such learning from "positive evidence" has been viewed as raising "logical" problems for language acquisition. In particular, without correction, how is the child to recover from conjecturing an over-general grammar, which will be consistent with any sentence that the child hears? There have been many proposals concerning how this "logical problem" can be dissolved. In this study, we review recent formal results showing that the learner has sufficient data to learn successfully from positive evidence, if it favors the simplest encoding of the linguistic input. Results include the learnability of linguistic prediction, grammaticality judgments, language production, and form-meaning mappings. The simplicity approach can also be "scaled down" to analyze the learnability of specific linguistic constructions, and it is amenable to empirical testing as a framework for describing human language acquisition.

Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1111/tops.12005
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84872706418
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