Learning antecedents for anaphoric one |
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Authors: | Akhtar Nameera Callanan Maureen Pullum Geoffrey K Scholz Barbara C |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA 95064, USA. nakhtar@ucsc.edu |
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Abstract: | 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.] claim experimental substantiation of an argument from the poverty of the stimulus, in the sense of Pullum and Scholz [Linguist. Rev. 19 (2002) 9]. They cite a specific feature of English--the assignment of appropriate antecedents for anaphoric one--that cannot possibly be learned from experience because the evidence needed is found only in utterances of a type too rare to be encountered. Their argument involves three empirical claims. In this note we dispute all three. |
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Keywords: | Language acquisition Poverty of the stimulus Linguistic input |
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