Indirect evidence and the poverty of the stimulus: the case of anaphoric one.

Cogn Sci

Department of Psychology, The University of Chicago Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Published: March 2009

It is widely held that children's linguistic input underdetermines the correct grammar, and that language learning must therefore be guided by innate linguistic constraints. Here, we show that a Bayesian model can learn a standard poverty-of-stimulus example, anaphoric one, from realistic input by relying on indirect evidence, without a linguistic constraint assumed to be necessary. Our demonstration does, however, assume other linguistic knowledge; thus, we reduce the problem of learning anaphoric one to that of learning this other knowledge. We discuss whether this other knowledge may itself be acquired without linguistic constraints.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1551-6709.2009.01014.xDOI Listing

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