HOME   ::   Paper

McLennan, M. S. (2002) Evolution and Learning of Language: Insights Drawn from Modeling.
Bookmark:  

Full-text
   URL: http://www.shaav.com/professional/linguistics/evollang.pdf
   Cached: PDF-485K   
   SAVE AS an easy-to-recall long filename:
      Filename format: author--year--title   PDF-485K   
      Filename format: author--year--title--journal|proceedings|...--pages   PDF-485K   

Related links
  Web search: Google Web Search   ::   Google Scholar
  Within this site: References (16)

Paper at a Glance

1 This vivid term, ``connectoplasm'' is intended to allude to ``cytoplasm'', and means a unstructured,
homogeneous mass of neurons.
1
Evolution and Learning of Language:
Insights Drawn from Modeling
M. Sean McLennan
P717 Evolution and Learning -- Dr. William Timberlake
Indiana University, Bloomington

1 Introduction How can we characterize the dual contributions ofbiology and environment to language? This is one of the most hotly contested topics in linguistics, psychology, and related disciplines. Even the staunchest adherents to both ends of the ``nature / nurture'' spectrum must acknowledge that there are bothcomponentsofgenetics and learning to language: no one would claim that specific languages are encoded in genes, nor would anyone propose that humans learn to have brains. The question becomes where in that spectrum we draw the line. Strong nativists (Pinker & Bloom (1990) for example) hold that even aspects ofgrammar are genetically determined and thus can be selected for via natural selection. This accounts for the kind of cross­linguistic regularity that characterizes ``Universal Grammar'' -- the linguistic knowledge that all humans possess. On the other end, strong developmentalists would maintain that the creation of neurons is as far as biology contributes; before the contribution of environment, the brain is just a ball of ``connectoplasm'' 1 . Any regularity in language is the result of regularity in the environment and other physiological regularity (for example, we all have eyes and ears that respond to stimuli in highly structured and similar ways). Thelen & Smith (1993) is representative of the approach taken by researchers on this end of the spectrum. 2 Nativists refer to reports like Gopnick (1990) which describes the KE family who show a language deficit that appears to be caused by a recessive gene. Developmentalists point to the profound cortical plasticity of the brain and its ability to self­organize; for example, within the visual system
...
BibTex
@unpublished{mclennan02,
  author={M. Sean McLennan},
  title={Evolution and Learning of Language: Insights Drawn from Modeling},
  year={2002},
  note={},
  url={http://www.isrl.uiuc.edu/~amag/langev/paper/mclennan02.html}
}


 HOME   ::   Paper Comments to: junwang4 you-know-at gmail.com Last update: 2/2/08