The world’s languages tend to exhibit a suffixing preference, adding inflections to the ends of words, rather than the beginning of them. Previous works has suggested that this apparently universal preference arises out of the constraints imposed by general purpose learning mechanisms in the brain, and specifically, the kinds of information structures that facilitate discrimination learning (St Clair, Monaghan, & Ramscar, 2009). Here I show that learning theory predicts that prefixes and suffixes will tend to promote different kinds of learning: prefixes will facilitate the learning of the probabilities that any following elements in a sequence will follow a label, whereas suffixing will promote the abstraction of...
Recent research has demonstrated that systematic mappings between phonological word forms and their ...
We examined whether French third- and fifth-grade children rely on morphemes when recognizing words ...
International audienceWe examined whether French third- and fifth-grade children rely on morphemes w...
The world’s languages tend to exhibit a suffixing preference, adding inflections to the ends of word...
corpus analysis, human experimentation The suffixing preference and language learning 2 It is a reas...
It is a reasonable assumption that universal properties of natural languages are not accidental. The...
Cross-linguistic studies of morphology have demonstrated that there is an asymmetry in the type of a...
Inflectional affixes expressing the same grammatical category (e.g., subject agreement) tend to appe...
There is a long-standing debate about the principles constraining the combinatorial properties of su...
How do children learn language in a way that allows generalization -- producing and comprehending ut...
Research on the differential role of preceding and succeeding morphological cues in category learnin...
Recent work on sentence recognition suggests that listeners use their knowledge of the language to d...
Conventional generative theories often consider language acquisition as governed by a set of learnin...
Understanding the driving factors behind typological patterns, or universals, has long been an impor...
This paper reports on a word recognition experiment in search of evidence for a word- beginning supe...
Recent research has demonstrated that systematic mappings between phonological word forms and their ...
We examined whether French third- and fifth-grade children rely on morphemes when recognizing words ...
International audienceWe examined whether French third- and fifth-grade children rely on morphemes w...
The world’s languages tend to exhibit a suffixing preference, adding inflections to the ends of word...
corpus analysis, human experimentation The suffixing preference and language learning 2 It is a reas...
It is a reasonable assumption that universal properties of natural languages are not accidental. The...
Cross-linguistic studies of morphology have demonstrated that there is an asymmetry in the type of a...
Inflectional affixes expressing the same grammatical category (e.g., subject agreement) tend to appe...
There is a long-standing debate about the principles constraining the combinatorial properties of su...
How do children learn language in a way that allows generalization -- producing and comprehending ut...
Research on the differential role of preceding and succeeding morphological cues in category learnin...
Recent work on sentence recognition suggests that listeners use their knowledge of the language to d...
Conventional generative theories often consider language acquisition as governed by a set of learnin...
Understanding the driving factors behind typological patterns, or universals, has long been an impor...
This paper reports on a word recognition experiment in search of evidence for a word- beginning supe...
Recent research has demonstrated that systematic mappings between phonological word forms and their ...
We examined whether French third- and fifth-grade children rely on morphemes when recognizing words ...
International audienceWe examined whether French third- and fifth-grade children rely on morphemes w...