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Also Recommended
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A Dialogue with Noam Chomsky in the Basque Country
Massimo Piattelli-Palmarini, Juan Uriagereka...
£19.00
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Rich Languages From Poor Inputs
Edited by Massimo Piattelli-Palmarini and Robert C. Berwick
336 pages
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Figures
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234x156mm
978-0-19-959033-9
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Hardback
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06 December 2012
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- Offers new perspectives on the Poverty of the Stimulus argument
- Includes contributions from theoretical linguists as well as child psychologists and educators
- Considers the influence of Carol Chomsky's research in language acquisition
This book addresses one of the most famous and controversial arguments in the study of language and mind, the Poverty of the Stimulus. Presented by Chomsky in 1968, the argument holds that children do not receive enough evidence to infer the existence of core aspects of language, such as the dependence of linguistic rules on hierarchical phrase structure. The argument strikes against empiricist accounts of language acquisition and supports the conclusion that knowledge of some aspects of grammar must be innate. In the first part of Rich Grammars from Poor Inputs, contributors consider the general issues around the POS argument, review the
empirical data, and offer new and plausible explanations. This is followed by a discussion of the the processes of language acquisition, and observed 'gaps' between adult and child grammar, concentrating on the late spontaneous acquisition by children of some key syntactic principles, basically, though not exclusively, between the ages of 5 to 9. Part 3 widens the horizon beyond language acquisition in the narrow sense, examining the natural development of reading and writing and of the child's growing sensitivity for the fine arts.Readership: All linguists, cognitive psychologists, and philosophers of language, and all those interested in the role of language in human development, cognition, and
communication.
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Edited by Massimo Piattelli-Palmarini, Department of Linguistics, University of Arizona, and Robert C. Berwick, Department of Brain and Cognitive Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Massimo Piattelli-Palmarini is Professor of Cognitive Science at the University of Arizona and a member of the Department of Linguistics, the Cognitive Science Program and the Department of Psychology. In October 1975 he organized the encounter between Jean Piaget and Noam Chomsky and in 1980 edited the proceedings Language and Learning, now translated into 11 languages and the echoes of which still explicitly resonate in the present volume. He is the editor, with Juan Uriagereka and Pello
Salaburu, of Of Minds and Language: A Dialogue with Noam Chomsky in the Basque Country (OUP) and author, with Jerry Fodor, of What Darwin Got Wrong.
Robert C. Berwick is Professor of Computer Science and Computational Linguistics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He has published more than a half-dozen books on the nature of language, language learnability, and computation, starting from his 1982 dissertation, The Acquisition of Syntactic Knowledge to The Grammatical Basis of Linguistic Performance, Computational Complexity and Natural Language, and Principle-Based Parsing. Most recently, he has focused on the biology of language, particularly the evolution of language.
Contributors: Massimo Piattelli-Palmarini, University of Arizona Robert C Berwick, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Adriana Belletti, University of Siena Thomas G. Bever, University of Arizona Noam Chomsky, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Susan Curtiss, Janet Dean Fodor, University of New York Lila Gleitman, University of Pennsylvania Merryl Goldberg, California State University San Marcos Stephanie Gottwald, Jean-Rémy Hochman, Xuan-Nga Cao Kam, Hotgrinds, Inc. Itziar Laka, University of the Basque Country Barbara
Landau, Johns Hopkins University Julie Anne Legate, University of Pennsylvania Jacques Mehler, International School of Advanced Studies, Trieste Wayne O'Neil, Massachusetts Institute fo Technology Charles Read, University of Wisconsin-Madison Luigi Rizzi, Rebecca Treiman, Washington University Ken Wexler, Maryane Wolf, Charles Yang, University of Pennsylvania
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"offers a very comprehensive and detailed overview of the state of current POS research and offers great insight into POS problems currently under investigation in the field of language acquisition." - Melissa Whatley, Linguist List
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1: Massimo Piattelli-Palmarini and Robert C Berwick: Introduction
Part 1 Poverty of the Stimulus and Modularity Revisited
2: Robert C. Berwick, Noam Chomsky, and Massimo Piattelli-Palmarini: Poverty of the Stimulus Stands: Why recent challenges fail
3: Xuan-Nga Cao Kam and Janet Dean Fodor: Children's Acquisition of Syntax: Simple models are too simple
4: Noam Chomsky: Poverty of the Stimulus: Willingness to be puzzled
5: Susan Curtiss: Revisiting Modularity: Using language as a window to the mind
6: Lila Gleitman and Barbara Landau: Every Child an Isolate: Nature's experiments in language learning
Part 2: Discrepancies Between Child Grammar and Adult Grammar
7: Jean-Rémy Hochman and Jacques Mehler: Recent Findings About Language Acquisition
8: Adriana Belletti and Luigi Rizzi: Ways of Avoiding Intervention: Some thoughts on the development of object relatives, passive, and control
9: Itziar Laka: Merging From the Temporal Input: On subject-object asymmetries and an ergative language
10: Ken Wexler: Tough-Movement Developmental Delay: Another effect of phasal computation
11: Julie Anne Legate and Charles Yang: Assessing Child and Adult Grammar
12: Thomas G. Bever: Three Aspects of the Relation Between Lexical and Syntactic Knowledge
Part 3: Broadening the Picture: Spelling andRreading
13: Charles Read and Rebecca Treiman: Children's Invented Spelling: What we have learned in forty years
14: Stephanie Gottwald and Maryane Wolf: How Insights into Child Language Changed the Development of Written Language
15: Wayne O'Neil: The Phonology of Invented Spelling
16: Merryl Goldberg: The Arts as Language: Invention, identity, and learning
References
Index
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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