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Knowledge and Learning in Natural Language by Charles D. Yang — book cover
Psycholinguistics & Language Acquisition, Historical (Diachronic) Linguistics, Developmental Psychology, Linguistics & Semiotics - General & Miscellaneous, Comparative Grammar

Knowledge and Learning in Natural Language

by Charles D. Yang
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Overview

It is a simple observation that children make mistakes when they learn a language. Yet, to the trained eye, these mistakes are far from random; in fact, they closely resemble perfectly grammatical utterances by adults—who speak other languages. This type of error analysis suggests a novel view of language learning: children are born with a fixed set of hypotheses about language—Chomsky's Universal Grammar—and these hypotheses compete to match the child's ambient language in a Darwinian fashion. The book presents evidence for this perspective from the study of children's words and grammar, and how language changes over time.

Synopsis

It is a simple observation that children make mistakes when they learn a language. Yet, to the trained eye, these mistakes are far from random; in fact, they closely resemble perfectly grammatical utterances by adults—who speak other languages. This type of error analysis suggests a novel view of language learning: children are born with a fixed set of hypotheses about language—Chomsky's Universal Grammar—and these hypotheses compete to match the child's ambient language in a Darwinian fashion. The book presents evidence for this perspective from the study of children's words and grammar, and how language changes over time.

About the Author, Charles D. Yang

Charles Yang has been teaching computational linguistics and language acquisition at Yale since receiving his Ph.D. in computer science at MIT.

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Book Details

Published
January 1, 2003
Publisher
Oxford University Press, USA
Pages
188
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780199254156

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