Literature DB >> 15147936

Learning the unlearnable: the role of missing evidence.

Terry Regier1, Susanne Gahl.   

Abstract

Syntactic knowledge is widely held to be partially innate, rather than learned. In a classic example, it is sometimes argued that children know the proper use of anaphoric one, although that knowledge could not have been learned from experience. Lidz et al. [Lidz, J., Waxman, S., & Freedman, J. (2003). What infants know about syntax but couldn't have learned: Experimental evidence for syntactic structure at 18 months. Cognition, 89, B65-B73.] pursue this argument, and present corpus and experimental evidence that appears to support it; they conclude that specific aspects of this knowledge must be innate. We demonstrate, contra Lidz et al., that this knowledge may in fact be acquired from the input, through a simple Bayesian learning procedure. The learning procedure succeeds because it is sensitive to the absence of particular input patterns--an aspect of learning that is apparently overlooked by Lidz et al. More generally, we suggest that a prominent form of the "argument from poverty of the stimulus" suffers from the same oversight, and is as a result logically unsound.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15147936     DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2003.12.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cognition        ISSN: 0010-0277


  4 in total

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Journal:  Lang Speech Hear Serv Sch       Date:  2011-05-26       Impact factor: 2.983

2.  Tuning in to non-adjacencies: Exposure to learnable patterns supports discovering otherwise difficult structures.

Authors:  Martin Zettersten; Christine E Potter; Jenny R Saffran
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2020-07-02

3.  Learning Through Processing: Toward an Integrated Approach to Early Word Learning.

Authors:  Stephan C Meylan; Elika Bergelson
Journal:  Annu Rev Linguist       Date:  2021-10-05

4.  Early production of the passive in two Eastern Bantu languages.

Authors:  Katherine J Alcock; Kenneth Rimba; Charles Rjc Newton
Journal:  First Lang       Date:  2012-11
  4 in total

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