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Chomsky and Language
Acquisition
Universal Grammar in Action
2
The paradox of language acquisition
[A]n entire community of highly trained professionals,
bringing to bear years of conscious attention and
sharing of information, has been unable to duplicate
the feat that every normal child accomplishes by the
age of ten or so, unconsciously and unaided.
(Jackendoff 1994: 26)
3
Chomsky on the Nature of Language
Acquisition
Large-scale sensory deficit seems to have limited effect
on language acquisition. Blind children acquire language
as the sighted do, even color terms and words for visual
experience like “see” and “look.” There are people who
have achieved close to normal linguistic competence
with no sensory input beyond that can be gained by
placing one’s hand on another person’s face and
throat. The analytic mechanism of the language
faculty seem to be triggered in much the same way
whether the input is auditory, visual, even tactual,
and seem to be localized in the same brain areas,
somewhat surprisingly.
4
These examples of impoverished input indicate the
richness of innate endowment — though normal
language acquisition is remarkable enough, as even
lexical access shows, not only because of its rapidity and
the intricacy of result. Thus very young children can
determine the meaning of a nonsense word from
syntactic information in a sentence far more complex that
they can produce.
A plausible assumption today is that the principles
of language are fixed and innate, and that variations is
restricted in the manner indicated. Each language, then,
is (virtually) determined by a choice of values for lexical
parameters: with the array of choices, we should be able
to deduce Hungarian; with another, Yoruba. … The
conditions of language acquisition make it plain that the
process must be largely inner-directed, as in other
aspects of growth, which means that all languages
must be close to identical, largely fixed by initial
state. (Chomsky 2000. New Horizons … : 121-2)
5
 At present little is known on how UG is
embodied in the brain.
UG is considered as a computational system in
the head, but we do not know about the specific
operations of the brain itself and what leads to
the development of these computational
systems.
6
 A plausible view is that language is a distinct and
specific part of the human mind and not a
manifestation of a more general capacity or
ability (of general intelligence).
Linguistic capacity rests on a specific module.
It is not the sub-product of a general cognitive
capacity.
7
Evidence
People can “lose their intelligence” and yet they
do not loose their language: substantial retarded
children (e.g. Williams syndrome) manifest a
good grammatical and linguistic competence.
On the other hand, highly intelligent people may
lack linguistic capacity (e.g. aphasia).
The fact that two kinds of abilities can dissociate
quantitatively and along multiple dimensions shows that
they are not manifestations of a single underlying ability.
(Pinker 2003: 23)
How does UG work?
 From autonomy to a black box…
 A black box problem:
 Something goes in, something comes out, but the
process is hidden
 The hidden process is self-contained and
independent
 Analysing the input and the output can tell us
what’s happening in the black box
The “black box”
 What is in the UG black box?
 Chomsky says that the contents of UG explains:
 a) the nature of syntax
 b) language acquisition
 The description of the grammar and the explanation
of how it is learnt are unified in this theory
The role of the input
 What is the input?
 Primary linguistic data
 This means all the language the child hears
 From the child’s environment
 The input is critical
 Without input at the right stage of maturation, the
child’s UG cannot develop into a grammar
 Evidence: “feral” children e.g. Genie
 Critical Period Hypothesis (Lenneberg)
What is the output?
 Chomsky sees language competence in
terms of a formal language
 A lexicon
 Contains words, idioms, etc.
 Lexical items have meanings
 A set of abstract, algebraic rules
 Including the rules of syntax, phonology, etc.
 The rules have no meaning
 The lexicon is learned normally (from
experience, trial and error, imitation)
 … but the rules are innate
Therefore…
 This answers our question!
 Q: What does UG contain?
 A: UG contains the core, formal rules of the
grammar
 This is Chomsky’s explanation for how the
generative creativity of language is acquired
Chomskyan rules
 How do these Chomskyan rules work?
 Instructions for generating sentence
structures, e.g.:
 S  NP VP
 NP  Det Adj N
 Structural slots filled by elements from the
lexicon, e.g.
 Det Adj N  The tall building
Chomskyan trees
Principles and parameters
 The rules that produce these “tree” structures
are innate…
 … but these rules differ from language to
language!
 Chomsky: the UG does not contain the actual
rules of each language.
 Instead, it contains PRINCIPLES and
PARAMETERS
 The rules of each language are derived from the
principles and parameters
Universals revisited
 “Principles” == linguistic universals
 Features found in all languages
 So what exactly are these universals?
 Are there really that many firm universals?
Probably not
 Many linguists take other approaches to
universals
Other “universals”
 Chomskyan universals are not to be confused
with…
 … Greenbergian universals
 Rooted in language typology
 Based on surveys of lots of languages
 Often involve percentages / probabilities
(i.e. they can have exceptions)
 May involve implications (if a language has X
then it also has Y)
Word order: the Greenberg
approach
Chomskyan universals
 Absolute (always found in every
language)
 Based on Chomskyan syntactic analysis
 These universals are aspects of the
Chomskyan theory of grammar…
 …and do not always make sense outside
that theory!
 They are simply a feature of the
biological UG
Substantive & Formal
Universals
 Substantive universals
 Things you get in language
 e.g. nouns, verbs
 This distinction can arise even without input!
 Formal universals
 How those things work together in sentences
 Constraints on the forms of syntactic rules
 Structure-dependency principle
Structure Dependency: a
reminder
 Grammatical rules operate on categories
 Many languages have rules that move around
specific parts of the sentence structure
 No language has any rule that ignores the structure
(e.g. simply inverts the order of the words)
 For example:
 I can understand Chomsky’s theory.
 can I understand Chomsky’s theory?
 * theory Chomsky’s understand can I?
Other principles
 The XP principles
 Govern the internal structure of phrases
 e.g. Every XP contains an X
 Every NP contains an N… every VP contains a
V… etc.
 Many other formal principles are very abstract;
examples:
• Principle of Proper Government
• Empty Category Principle
• Case Assignment Principle
Parameters
 Parameters explain variation across languages
 A parameter is like a “switch”
 It is a setting which can take one of a small
number of values
 Yes/No, On/Off, +/-
 The setting of the parameter determines one or
more aspects of the grammar
 The parameters are set during language
acquisition
The Pro-drop Parameter
 Controls whether subject pronouns can be
dropped in the language
 I understand Chomsky’s theory
 * understand Chomsky’s theory  WRONG
 Spanish: [+ Pro-drop]
 English and French: [- Pro-drop]
Heads and complements
 The Head of a phrase is the “compulsory
word” of the phrase
 A verb is the head of a verb phrase
 A noun is the head of a noun phrase
 The Complement of a phrase is an
“optional” other element in the phrase
 A verb’s complement is its object
 ride a horse, explain the problem
 A preposition’s complement is its noun
phrase
Some examples -
 Languages like English:
 Verb before Object
 Preposition before NP
 Question-words at start of sentence
 Languages like Japanese:
 Verb after Object
 Preposition after NP (= postposition)
 Question-words at end of sentence
The Head Parameter
 In English, the head consistently comes
before the complement…
 In Japanese, the head consistently comes
after the complement…
 … in many different kinds of syntactic
phrases!
 This same pattern is found in other
languages
The Head Parameter
 The orders of verb & object,
pre/postposition & NP, and question word
& sentence are all controlled by the Head
Parameter
 This has two settings:
 Head-First (e.g. English)
 Head-Last (e.g. Japanese)
Setting Parameters
 The child must set the parameter for their
language, based on evidence in the input
 Remember, the input is vital!
 When the Head Parameter matures, the child
sets it to:
 Head First if their input contains things like
verb-object
 Head Last if their input contains things like
object-verb
The power of parameters
 A single parameter can affect many areas of the
grammar
 One example of verb-object or object-verb is
enough to set the Head Parameter…
 Eat your spinach! (Head First)
 Your spinach eat! (Head Last)
 … which is all the child needs to correctly order
verbs, pre/postpositions and question words
(and other constructions too)
The problems with
parameters
 Some languages don’t fit into neat categories
 e.g. German : partly Head First and partly Head
Last ???
 It is hard to find good examples of parameter
setting in child data
 Not much evidence for a sudden effect on
children’s speech from a parameter being set
 e.g. young English-speaking children frequently
drop subjects (in a [- Pro-drop] language!) …
 … and this falls off gradually not suddenly
 What ARE these parameters anyway?
Opposition to the UG theory
 General trend away from “instinctive”
learning and towards “social” learning
 Autonomy of language not accepted by
many linguists and psychologists
 Many linguists disagree with Chomsky’s
analysis of grammar
 Functional grammar
 Usage-based models of language
Ignoring the data?
 “An I-language approach [i.e. a Chomskyan
approach …] sees language acquisition as a
logical problem that can be solved in principle
without looking at the development of actual
children in detail.”
 Cook and Newson (1996: 78)
 Is this valid?
Conclusion
 Chomsky’s theory has advantages…
 A simple explanation for complex acquisition
 It explains common features of language
 … but there are also problems
 Some data is difficult to interpret from Chomsky’s
position
 Some data supports this position and other
positions simultaneously.
Summary
 Chomsky’s theory of language separates
lexicon and grammar
 Grammar (UG) is innate and matures
 It functions as an independent “black box”
 UG contains principles and parameters
 Principles: universal basic features of grammar
 e.g. nouns, verbs, structure-dependency
 Parameters: grammar “switches” with a small
number of options
 e.g. Pro-Drop, Head direction
 Input is needed at the critical period, to learn the
lexicon and to set the parameters
References
• Neil, S, Dreidre, W. (1990). Modern Linguistics: The
results of Chomsky’s Revolution. Harmondsworth,
Middlesex, England: Pelican Books.
• Newmeyer, F. (1986). Linguistic Theory in America.
Orlando: Academic Press.
• Neil, S. (2004). Chomsky: Ideas and Ideals. New
York: CUP.
• Deneen, F. P. (1967). An Introduction to General
Linguistics. Washington, D.C: Georgetown University
Press.
• Chomsky, N. ‘A Review of B. F. Skinner’s Verbal
Behaviour’. Landmarks in American Language and
Linguistics. Smolinski, F. (1986). Washington, D.C.:
• http://www.uni-kassel.de/fb8/misc/lfb/html/text/2frame.htm
• www.chomsky.info

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Chomsky and Universal Grammar in Language Acquisition

  • 2. 2 The paradox of language acquisition [A]n entire community of highly trained professionals, bringing to bear years of conscious attention and sharing of information, has been unable to duplicate the feat that every normal child accomplishes by the age of ten or so, unconsciously and unaided. (Jackendoff 1994: 26)
  • 3. 3 Chomsky on the Nature of Language Acquisition Large-scale sensory deficit seems to have limited effect on language acquisition. Blind children acquire language as the sighted do, even color terms and words for visual experience like “see” and “look.” There are people who have achieved close to normal linguistic competence with no sensory input beyond that can be gained by placing one’s hand on another person’s face and throat. The analytic mechanism of the language faculty seem to be triggered in much the same way whether the input is auditory, visual, even tactual, and seem to be localized in the same brain areas, somewhat surprisingly.
  • 4. 4 These examples of impoverished input indicate the richness of innate endowment — though normal language acquisition is remarkable enough, as even lexical access shows, not only because of its rapidity and the intricacy of result. Thus very young children can determine the meaning of a nonsense word from syntactic information in a sentence far more complex that they can produce. A plausible assumption today is that the principles of language are fixed and innate, and that variations is restricted in the manner indicated. Each language, then, is (virtually) determined by a choice of values for lexical parameters: with the array of choices, we should be able to deduce Hungarian; with another, Yoruba. … The conditions of language acquisition make it plain that the process must be largely inner-directed, as in other aspects of growth, which means that all languages must be close to identical, largely fixed by initial state. (Chomsky 2000. New Horizons … : 121-2)
  • 5. 5  At present little is known on how UG is embodied in the brain. UG is considered as a computational system in the head, but we do not know about the specific operations of the brain itself and what leads to the development of these computational systems.
  • 6. 6  A plausible view is that language is a distinct and specific part of the human mind and not a manifestation of a more general capacity or ability (of general intelligence). Linguistic capacity rests on a specific module. It is not the sub-product of a general cognitive capacity.
  • 7. 7 Evidence People can “lose their intelligence” and yet they do not loose their language: substantial retarded children (e.g. Williams syndrome) manifest a good grammatical and linguistic competence. On the other hand, highly intelligent people may lack linguistic capacity (e.g. aphasia). The fact that two kinds of abilities can dissociate quantitatively and along multiple dimensions shows that they are not manifestations of a single underlying ability. (Pinker 2003: 23)
  • 8. How does UG work?  From autonomy to a black box…  A black box problem:  Something goes in, something comes out, but the process is hidden  The hidden process is self-contained and independent  Analysing the input and the output can tell us what’s happening in the black box
  • 9. The “black box”  What is in the UG black box?  Chomsky says that the contents of UG explains:  a) the nature of syntax  b) language acquisition  The description of the grammar and the explanation of how it is learnt are unified in this theory
  • 10. The role of the input  What is the input?  Primary linguistic data  This means all the language the child hears  From the child’s environment  The input is critical  Without input at the right stage of maturation, the child’s UG cannot develop into a grammar  Evidence: “feral” children e.g. Genie  Critical Period Hypothesis (Lenneberg)
  • 11. What is the output?  Chomsky sees language competence in terms of a formal language  A lexicon  Contains words, idioms, etc.  Lexical items have meanings  A set of abstract, algebraic rules  Including the rules of syntax, phonology, etc.  The rules have no meaning  The lexicon is learned normally (from experience, trial and error, imitation)  … but the rules are innate
  • 12. Therefore…  This answers our question!  Q: What does UG contain?  A: UG contains the core, formal rules of the grammar  This is Chomsky’s explanation for how the generative creativity of language is acquired
  • 13. Chomskyan rules  How do these Chomskyan rules work?  Instructions for generating sentence structures, e.g.:  S  NP VP  NP  Det Adj N  Structural slots filled by elements from the lexicon, e.g.  Det Adj N  The tall building
  • 15. Principles and parameters  The rules that produce these “tree” structures are innate…  … but these rules differ from language to language!  Chomsky: the UG does not contain the actual rules of each language.  Instead, it contains PRINCIPLES and PARAMETERS  The rules of each language are derived from the principles and parameters
  • 16. Universals revisited  “Principles” == linguistic universals  Features found in all languages  So what exactly are these universals?  Are there really that many firm universals? Probably not  Many linguists take other approaches to universals
  • 17. Other “universals”  Chomskyan universals are not to be confused with…  … Greenbergian universals  Rooted in language typology  Based on surveys of lots of languages  Often involve percentages / probabilities (i.e. they can have exceptions)  May involve implications (if a language has X then it also has Y)
  • 18. Word order: the Greenberg approach
  • 19. Chomskyan universals  Absolute (always found in every language)  Based on Chomskyan syntactic analysis  These universals are aspects of the Chomskyan theory of grammar…  …and do not always make sense outside that theory!  They are simply a feature of the biological UG
  • 20. Substantive & Formal Universals  Substantive universals  Things you get in language  e.g. nouns, verbs  This distinction can arise even without input!  Formal universals  How those things work together in sentences  Constraints on the forms of syntactic rules  Structure-dependency principle
  • 21. Structure Dependency: a reminder  Grammatical rules operate on categories  Many languages have rules that move around specific parts of the sentence structure  No language has any rule that ignores the structure (e.g. simply inverts the order of the words)  For example:  I can understand Chomsky’s theory.  can I understand Chomsky’s theory?  * theory Chomsky’s understand can I?
  • 22. Other principles  The XP principles  Govern the internal structure of phrases  e.g. Every XP contains an X  Every NP contains an N… every VP contains a V… etc.  Many other formal principles are very abstract; examples: • Principle of Proper Government • Empty Category Principle • Case Assignment Principle
  • 23. Parameters  Parameters explain variation across languages  A parameter is like a “switch”  It is a setting which can take one of a small number of values  Yes/No, On/Off, +/-  The setting of the parameter determines one or more aspects of the grammar  The parameters are set during language acquisition
  • 24. The Pro-drop Parameter  Controls whether subject pronouns can be dropped in the language  I understand Chomsky’s theory  * understand Chomsky’s theory  WRONG  Spanish: [+ Pro-drop]  English and French: [- Pro-drop]
  • 25. Heads and complements  The Head of a phrase is the “compulsory word” of the phrase  A verb is the head of a verb phrase  A noun is the head of a noun phrase  The Complement of a phrase is an “optional” other element in the phrase  A verb’s complement is its object  ride a horse, explain the problem  A preposition’s complement is its noun phrase
  • 26. Some examples -  Languages like English:  Verb before Object  Preposition before NP  Question-words at start of sentence  Languages like Japanese:  Verb after Object  Preposition after NP (= postposition)  Question-words at end of sentence
  • 27. The Head Parameter  In English, the head consistently comes before the complement…  In Japanese, the head consistently comes after the complement…  … in many different kinds of syntactic phrases!  This same pattern is found in other languages
  • 28. The Head Parameter  The orders of verb & object, pre/postposition & NP, and question word & sentence are all controlled by the Head Parameter  This has two settings:  Head-First (e.g. English)  Head-Last (e.g. Japanese)
  • 29. Setting Parameters  The child must set the parameter for their language, based on evidence in the input  Remember, the input is vital!  When the Head Parameter matures, the child sets it to:  Head First if their input contains things like verb-object  Head Last if their input contains things like object-verb
  • 30. The power of parameters  A single parameter can affect many areas of the grammar  One example of verb-object or object-verb is enough to set the Head Parameter…  Eat your spinach! (Head First)  Your spinach eat! (Head Last)  … which is all the child needs to correctly order verbs, pre/postpositions and question words (and other constructions too)
  • 31. The problems with parameters  Some languages don’t fit into neat categories  e.g. German : partly Head First and partly Head Last ???  It is hard to find good examples of parameter setting in child data  Not much evidence for a sudden effect on children’s speech from a parameter being set  e.g. young English-speaking children frequently drop subjects (in a [- Pro-drop] language!) …  … and this falls off gradually not suddenly  What ARE these parameters anyway?
  • 32. Opposition to the UG theory  General trend away from “instinctive” learning and towards “social” learning  Autonomy of language not accepted by many linguists and psychologists  Many linguists disagree with Chomsky’s analysis of grammar  Functional grammar  Usage-based models of language
  • 33. Ignoring the data?  “An I-language approach [i.e. a Chomskyan approach …] sees language acquisition as a logical problem that can be solved in principle without looking at the development of actual children in detail.”  Cook and Newson (1996: 78)  Is this valid?
  • 34. Conclusion  Chomsky’s theory has advantages…  A simple explanation for complex acquisition  It explains common features of language  … but there are also problems  Some data is difficult to interpret from Chomsky’s position  Some data supports this position and other positions simultaneously.
  • 35. Summary  Chomsky’s theory of language separates lexicon and grammar  Grammar (UG) is innate and matures  It functions as an independent “black box”  UG contains principles and parameters  Principles: universal basic features of grammar  e.g. nouns, verbs, structure-dependency  Parameters: grammar “switches” with a small number of options  e.g. Pro-Drop, Head direction  Input is needed at the critical period, to learn the lexicon and to set the parameters
  • 36. References • Neil, S, Dreidre, W. (1990). Modern Linguistics: The results of Chomsky’s Revolution. Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England: Pelican Books. • Newmeyer, F. (1986). Linguistic Theory in America. Orlando: Academic Press. • Neil, S. (2004). Chomsky: Ideas and Ideals. New York: CUP. • Deneen, F. P. (1967). An Introduction to General Linguistics. Washington, D.C: Georgetown University Press. • Chomsky, N. ‘A Review of B. F. Skinner’s Verbal Behaviour’. Landmarks in American Language and Linguistics. Smolinski, F. (1986). Washington, D.C.: • http://www.uni-kassel.de/fb8/misc/lfb/html/text/2frame.htm • www.chomsky.info