Several authors propose that children may acquire syntactic categories on the basis of co-occurrence statistics of words in the input. This paper assesses the relative merits of two such accounts by assessing the type and amount of productive language that results from computing co-occurrence statistics over conjoint and independent preceding and following contexts. This is achieved through the implementation of these methods in MOSAIC, a computational model of syntax acquisition that produces utterances that can be directly compared to child speech, and has a developmental component (i.e. produces increasingly long utterances). It is shown that the computation of co-occurrence statistics over conjoint contexts or frames results in a patter...
While many studies have shown that toddlers are able to detect syntactic regularities in speech, the...
The verb-island hypothesis (Tomasello, 1992) states that children’s early grammars consist of sets o...
How do children begin to use language to say things they have never heard before? The origins of lin...
In recent years, several authors have investigated how co-occurrence statistics in natural language ...
In recent years, several authors have investigated how co-occurrence statistics in natural language ...
On the resolution of ambiguities 2 In recent years, several authors have investigated how co-occurre...
Mainstream linguistic theory has traditionally assumed that children come into the world with rich i...
We examine the success of developmental distributional analysis in English, German and Dutch. We emb...
This research represents an attempt to model the child’s acquisition of syntactic categories. A comp...
How early do children produce multiword utterances? Do children\u27s early utterances reflect abstra...
To acquire language proficiently, learners have to segment fluent speech into units – that is, word...
Productivity is a central concept in the study of language and language acquisition. As a test case ...
International audienceWhile many studies have shown that toddlers are able to detect syntactic regul...
This paper presents an analysis of the role of input size and generativity (ability to produce novel...
While usage-based approaches to language development enjoy considerable support from computational s...
While many studies have shown that toddlers are able to detect syntactic regularities in speech, the...
The verb-island hypothesis (Tomasello, 1992) states that children’s early grammars consist of sets o...
How do children begin to use language to say things they have never heard before? The origins of lin...
In recent years, several authors have investigated how co-occurrence statistics in natural language ...
In recent years, several authors have investigated how co-occurrence statistics in natural language ...
On the resolution of ambiguities 2 In recent years, several authors have investigated how co-occurre...
Mainstream linguistic theory has traditionally assumed that children come into the world with rich i...
We examine the success of developmental distributional analysis in English, German and Dutch. We emb...
This research represents an attempt to model the child’s acquisition of syntactic categories. A comp...
How early do children produce multiword utterances? Do children\u27s early utterances reflect abstra...
To acquire language proficiently, learners have to segment fluent speech into units – that is, word...
Productivity is a central concept in the study of language and language acquisition. As a test case ...
International audienceWhile many studies have shown that toddlers are able to detect syntactic regul...
This paper presents an analysis of the role of input size and generativity (ability to produce novel...
While usage-based approaches to language development enjoy considerable support from computational s...
While many studies have shown that toddlers are able to detect syntactic regularities in speech, the...
The verb-island hypothesis (Tomasello, 1992) states that children’s early grammars consist of sets o...
How do children begin to use language to say things they have never heard before? The origins of lin...