Book Details
Creating Language : Integrating Evolution, Acquisition, and Processing
ISBN 9780262034319
Pages 330
Year 2016
Edition 1
Publisher MIT PRESS
Subject LITERATURE & LINGUISTICS
Description
A work that reveals the profound links between the evolution, acquisition, and processing of language, and proposes a new integrative framework for the language sciences.
Language is a hallmark of the human species; the flexibility and unbounded expressivity of our linguistic abilities is unique in the biological world. In this book, Morten Christiansen and Nick Chater argue that to understand this astonishing phenomenon, we must consider how language is created: moment by moment, in the generation and understanding of individual utterances; year by year, as new language learners acquire language skills; and generation by generation, as languages change, split, and fuse through the processes of cultural evolution. Christiansen and Chater propose a revolutionary new framework for understanding the evolution, acquisition, and processing of language, offering an integrated theory of how language creation is intertwined across these multiple timescales.
Christiansen and Chater argue that mainstream generative approaches to language do not provide compelling accounts of language evolution, acquisition, and processing. Their own account draws on important developments from across the language sciences, including statistical natural language processing, learnability theory, computational modeling, and psycholinguistic experiments with children and adults. Christiansen and Chater also consider some of the major implications of their theoretical approach for our understanding of how language works, offering alternative accounts of specific aspects of language, including the structure of the vocabulary, the importance of experience in language processing, and the nature of recursive linguistic structure.
About Author(s)
Morten H. Christiansen is Professor of Psychology and Codirector of the Cognitive Science Program at Cornell University.
Nick Chater is Professor of Behavioural Science at Warwick Business School and author of The Mind Is Flat: The Remarkable Shallowness of the Improvising Brain, among many other books. He studies the cognitive and social foundations of rationality and language and is the recipient of four national awards for psychological research and, in 2023, the Cognitive Science Society's David E. Rumelhart Prize for contributions to the foundation of cognition.
Content
Preface
I Theoretical and Empirical Foundations 1
1 Language Create across Multiple Timescales
2 Language as Shaped by the Brain
3 Language Acquisition Meets Language Evolution
4 The Now-or-Never Processing Bottleneck
II Implications for the Nature of Language
5 Language Acquisition through Multiple-Cue-Integration
6 Experience- based Language Processing
7 Recursion as a Usage-Based Skill
8 From Fragmentation to Integration
References
Name Index
Subject Index
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