Event
Working Title -- How to Get (Linguistically) Rich when
you’re (Computationally) Poor: The Acquisition and Use of
Abstract Linguistic Knowledge
Supervisors: Charles Yang, Mitch Marcus (CIS)
Proposal Committee: Tony Kroch (Chair), John Trueswell,
Kathryn Schuler
Date: May 2nd, 2019
Time: 11:00am
Location: Linguistics Library, 3401-C Walnut Street 3rd
floor, Suite 300 (first door on the right once you enter the
Department's suite)
Abstract:
The proposed dissertation explores the interaction between
computation, mechanisms, and representation within language
acquisition and language processing. The primary goal is
offer support for two main hypotheses. Firstly, that an
algorithmic-level understanding of the issues here is
crucially informative above purely high-level computational
accounts. Additionally, the brunt of the 'heavy lifting' in
language processing and acquisition is not due to boundless
computational power or explicit optimization, but rather due
to specifics of the linguistic representations and
abstractions at play. I address these questions through a
set of five case studies.
In the domain of lexical acquisition, the first case study
presents a model of word learning grounded in category
formation. The model is evaluated both through computational
simulation as well as a novel eye-tracking paradigm. A
second case study develops a theory of syntactic category
acquisition based on the iterative bootstrapping of simple
distributional clusters. The third case study addresses the
question of information theoretic efficiency in language
use. I argue that to whatever degree we can characterize the
output of the language production system as ‘efficient’ in
information ordering, this is an emergent property of
incremental generation. The fourth case study uses a
combination of corpus statistics and an acceptability task
to investigate the factors responsible for conditioning the
choice of (optional) embedded V2 in Swedish. I demonstrate
that apparent stable lexical variation is not due to
probabilistic representations of verbs themselves, but
arises as an interaction between context and the formal
properties of predicate classes. Finally, the fifth case
study uses an accent-adaptation paradigm to argue that
acoustic-phonetic signal is not maintained over time during
speech processing.