Learning an Input Filter for Argument Structure Acquisition

How do children learn a verb’s argument structure when their input contains nonbasic clauses that obscure verb transitivity? Here we present a new model that infers verb transitivity by learning to filter out non-basic clauses that were likely parsed in error. In simulations with childdirected speech, we show that this model accurately categorizes the majority of 50 frequent transitive, intransitive and alternating verbs, and jointly learns appropriate parameters for filtering parsing errors. Our model is thus able to filter out problematic data for verb learning without knowing in advance which data need to be filtered.

[1]  Virginia Valian Syntactic subjects in the early speech of American and Italian children , 1991, Cognition.

[2]  R. Gómez,et al.  Infant artificial language learning and language acquisition , 2000, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[3]  Jeffrey Lidz,et al.  When Domain-General Learning Fails and When It Succeeds: Identifying the Contribution of Domain Specificity , 2009 .

[4]  L. Gleitman,et al.  Language and Experience: Evidence from the Blind Child , 1988 .

[5]  Jeffrey Lidz,et al.  Discontinuous development in the acquisition of filler-gap dependencies: Evidence from 15- and 20-month-olds , 2016 .

[6]  Donald Geman,et al.  Stochastic Relaxation, Gibbs Distributions, and the Bayesian Restoration of Images , 1984, IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence.

[7]  Letitia R. Naigles,et al.  Mandarin learners use syntactic bootstrapping in verb acquisition , 2008, Cognition.

[8]  E. Newport,et al.  Getting it right by getting it wrong: When learners change languages , 2009, Cognitive Psychology.

[9]  Daniel Swingley,et al.  Distributional Learning of Vowel Categories Is Supported by Prosody in Infant-Directed Speech , 2012, CogSci.

[10]  Noam Chomsky,et al.  वाक्यविन्यास का सैद्धान्तिक पक्ष = Aspects of the theory of syntax , 1965 .

[11]  Beth Levin,et al.  English Verb Classes and Alternations: A Preliminary Investigation , 1993 .

[12]  Karin Stromswold,et al.  The Acquisition of Subject and Object Wh-Questions , 1995 .

[13]  Howard Lasnik On Certain Substitutes for Negative Data , 1989 .

[14]  J. Tenenbaum,et al.  Variability, negative evidence, and the acquisition of verb argument constructions. , 2010, Journal of child language.

[15]  Lisa Pearl,et al.  Syntactic Islands and Learning Biases: Combining Experimental Syntax and Computational Modeling to Investigate the Language Acquisition Problem , 2013 .

[16]  Suzanne Stevenson,et al.  A Computational Model of Early Argument Structure Acquisition , 2008, Cogn. Sci..

[17]  P. Suppes The Semantics of Children's Language , 1974 .

[18]  Steven Pinker,et al.  Language learnability and language development , 1985 .

[19]  L. Gleitman,et al.  Yes, we still need Universal Grammar , 2004, Cognition.

[20]  L. Gleitman The Structural Sources of Verb Meanings , 2020, Sentence First, Arguments Afterward.

[21]  Noam Chomsky,et al.  Lectures on Government and Binding , 1981 .

[22]  W. K. Hastings,et al.  Monte Carlo Sampling Methods Using Markov Chains and Their Applications , 1970 .

[23]  Sylvia Yuan,et al.  Syntactic bootstrapping. , 2010, Wiley interdisciplinary reviews. Cognitive science.

[24]  J. Morgan,et al.  Acoustical cues and grammatical units in speech to two preverbal infants* , 2008, Journal of Child Language.

[25]  Letitia R. Naigles,et al.  The input to verb learning in Mandarin Chinese: a role for syntactic bootstrapping. , 2005, Developmental psychology.

[26]  R. Brown,et al.  A First Language , 1973 .

[27]  益子 真由美 Argument Structure , 1993, The Lexicon.

[28]  S. Pinker Learnability and Cognition: The Acquisition of Argument Structure , 1989 .