HOME   ::   Back to the Paper   ::   References

Christiansen, M. H. and Devlin, J. T. (1997) Recursive inconsistencies are hard to learn: A connectionist perspective on universal word order correlations. In Proceedings of the Nineteenth Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, pages 113--118. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.

References (may not be complete)  [Original format]  [Sort by year]  [Sort by author]  [Sort by citations]

Chomsky, N. (1986). Knowledge of Language. New York: Praeger.

Google

Christiansen, M.H. (1994). Infinite Languages, Finite Minds: Connectionism, Learning and Linguistic Structure. Doctoral dissertation, Centre for Cognitive Science, University of Edinburgh.

Google UIUC

Christiansen, M.H. & Chater, N. (in submission). Toward a Connectionist Model of Recursion in Human Linguistic Performance.

Google UIUC

Cleeremans, A. (1993). Mechanisms of Implicit Learning: Connectionist Models of Sequence Processing. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

Google

Dryer, M.S. (1992). The Greenbergian Word Order Correlations. Language, 68, 81--138.

Google

Elman, J.L. (1990). Finding Structure in Time. Cognitive Science, 14, 179--211.

Google UIUC

Elman, J.L. (1991). Distributed Representation, Simple Recurrent Networks, and Grammatical Structure. Machine Learning, 7, 195--225.

Google UIUC

Hawkins, J.A. (1994). A Performance Theory of Order and Constituency. UK: Cambridge University Press.

Google

Pinker, S. (1994). The Language Instinct: How the Mind Creates Language. New York: NY: William Morrow and Company.

Google UIUC

 HOME   ::   Back to the Paper   ::   References Comments to: junwang4 you-know-at gmail.com Last update: 11/16/07