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Janet Dean Fodor

  •  Home
  •  Publications
    16
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  •  Events
    1
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    14

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  • All publications (16)
  •  153
    Phrase structure parameters
    with Stephen Crain
    Linguistics and Philosophy 13 (6). 1990.
    Language AcquisitionPsycholinguistics
  •  53
    Sentence matching and overgeneration
    with Stephen Crain
    Cognition 26 (2): 123-169. 1987.
    Linguistics
  • Center-embedded sentences : what's pronounceable is comprehensible
    with Stefanie Nickels and Esther Schott
    In Roberto G. De Almeida & Lila R. Gleitman (eds.), On Concepts, Modules, and Language: Cognitive Science at its Core, Oup Usa. 2017.
  •  14
    Setting the first few syntactic parameters: A computational analysis
    with William G. Sakas
    In Morton Ann Gernsbacher & Sharon J. Derry (eds.), Proceedings of the 20th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, Lawerence Erlbaum. 1998.
  •  77
    Bigrams and the Richness of the Stimulus
    with Xuân-Nga Cao Kam, Iglika Stoyneshka, Lidiya Tornyova, and William G. Sakas
    Cognitive Science 32 (4): 771-787. 2008.
    Recent challenges to Chomsky's poverty of the stimulus thesis for language acquisition suggest that children's primary data may carry “indirect evidence” about linguistic constructions despite containing no instances of them. Indirect evidence is claimed to suffice for grammar acquisition, without need for innate knowledge. This article reports experiments based on those of, who demonstrated that a simple bigram language model can induce the correct form of auxiliary inversion in certain complex…Read more
    Recent challenges to Chomsky's poverty of the stimulus thesis for language acquisition suggest that children's primary data may carry “indirect evidence” about linguistic constructions despite containing no instances of them. Indirect evidence is claimed to suffice for grammar acquisition, without need for innate knowledge. This article reports experiments based on those of, who demonstrated that a simple bigram language model can induce the correct form of auxiliary inversion in certain complex questions. This article investigates the nature of the indirect evidence that supports this learning, and assesses how reliably it is available. Results confirm the original finding for one specific sentence type but show that the model's success is highly circumscribed. It performs poorly on inversion in related constructions in English and Dutch. Because other, more powerful statistical models have so far been shown to succeed only on the same limited subset of cases as the bigram model, it remains to be seen whether stimulus richness can be substantiated more generally.
    Conscious and Unconscious Learning
  •  258
    Lauri Karttunen and Stanley Peters. Conventional implicature. Syntax and semantics, Volume 11, Presupposition, edited by Choon-Kyu Oh and David A. Dinneen, Academic Press, New York, San Francisco, and London, 1979, pp. 1–56. - Gerald Gazdar. A solution to the projection problem. Syntax and semantics, Volume 11, Presupposition, edited by Choon-Kyu Oh and David A. Dinneen, Academic Press, New York, San Francisco, and London, 1979, pp. 57–89. - Janet Dean Fodor. In defense of the truth value gap. Syntax and semantics, Volume 11, Presupposition, edited by Choon-Kyu Oh and David A. Dinneen, Academic Press, New York, San Francisco, and London, 1979, pp. 199–224. - Ruth M. Kempson. Presupposition, opacity, and ambiguity. Syntax and semantics, Volume 11, Presupposition, edited by Choon-Kyu Oh and David A. Dinneen, Academic Press, New York, San Francisco, and London, 1979, pp. 283–297. - S. K. Thomason. Truth-value gaps, many truth values, and possible worlds. Syntax and semantics, Volume 11, P
    with Lauri Karttunen, Stanley Peters, Choon-kyu Oh, David A. Dinneen, and Gerald Gazdar
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 46 (2): 412-415. 1981.
    Logic and Philosophy of Logic
  •  72
    Module or muddle?
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 8 (1): 7-9. 1985.
    Philosophy of Cognitive ScienceModularity in Cognitive Science
  •  218
    The sausage machine: A new two-stage parsing model
    with Lyn Frazier
    Cognition 6 (4): 291-325. 1978.
  •  153
    The linguistic description of opaque contexts
    Garland. 1970.
    SemanticsIntensionality and OpacityGenerics
  •  1
    Semantics: Theories of Meaning in Generative Grammar
    Synthese 43 (3): 461-464. 1980.
  •  64
    Is the human sentence parsing mechanism an ATN?
    with Lyn Frazier
    Cognition 8 (4): 417-459. 1980.
    LinguisticsPhilosophy of Cognitive Science, MiscellaneousPsycholinguistics
  •  101
    Phrase structure parsing and the island constraints
    Linguistics and Philosophy 6 (2). 1983.
    PsycholinguisticsSyntactic Phenomena
  •  41
    Semantics: theories of meaning in generative grammar
    Harvester Press. 1977.
    Semantics
  •  294
    Referential and quantificational indefinites
    with Ivan A. Sag
    Linguistics and Philosophy 5 (3). 1982.
    The formal semantics that we have proposed for definite and indefinite descriptions analyzes them both as variable-binding operators and as referring terms. It is the referential analysis which makes it possible to account for the facts outlined in Section 2, e.g. for the purely ‘instrumental’ role of the descriptive content; for the appearance of unusually wide scope readings relative to other quantifiers, higher predicates, and island boundaries; for the fact that the island-escaping readings …Read more
    The formal semantics that we have proposed for definite and indefinite descriptions analyzes them both as variable-binding operators and as referring terms. It is the referential analysis which makes it possible to account for the facts outlined in Section 2, e.g. for the purely ‘instrumental’ role of the descriptive content; for the appearance of unusually wide scope readings relative to other quantifiers, higher predicates, and island boundaries; for the fact that the island-escaping readings are always equivalent to maximally wide scope quantifiers; and for the appearance of violations of the identity conditions on variables in deleted constituents. We would emphasize that this is not a random collection of observations. They cohere naturally with each other, and with facts about other phrases that are unambigously referential.We conceded at the outset of this paper that the referential use of an indefinite noun phrase does not, by itself, motivate the postulation of a referential interpretation. Our argument has been that the behavior of indefinites in complex sentences cannot be economically described, and certainly cannot be explained, unless a referential interpretation is assumed. It could be accounted for in pragmatic terms only if the whole theory of scope relations and of conditions on deletion could be eliminated from the semantics and incorporated into a purely pragmatic theory. But this seems unlikely
    QuantifiersReference
  •  141
    Situations and representations
    Linguistics and Philosophy 8 (1). 1985.
    Situation Semantics
  •  3
    Setting syntactic parameters
    In Mark Baltin & Chris Collins (eds.), The Handbook of Contemporary Syntactic Theory, Blackwell. 2001.
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