Learnability in Optimality Theory

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2000-05-15
Publisher(s): Mit Pr
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Summary

Highlighting the close relationship between linguistic explanation and learnability, Bruce Tesar and Paul Smolensky examine the implications of Optimality Theory (OT) for language learnability. They show how the core principles of OT lead to the learning principle of constraint demotion, the basis for a family of algorithms that infer constraint rankings from linguistic forms. Of primary concern to the authors are the ambiguity of the data received by the learner and the resulting interdependence of the core grammar and the structural analysis of overt linguistic forms. The authors argue that iterative approaches to interdependencies, inspired by work in statistical learning theory, can be successfully adapted to address the interdependencies of language learning. Both OT and Constraint Demotion play critical roles in their adaptation. The authors support their findings both formally and through simulations. They also illustrate how their approach could be extended to other language learning issues, including subset relations and the learning of phonological underlying forms.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments vii
Language Learning
1(18)
What This Book Is About
1(1)
Learnability and Universal Grammar
2(4)
Decomposing the Learning Problem
6(9)
Outline of the Book
15(4)
An Overview of Optimality Theory
19(14)
Constraints and Their Violation
19(4)
Optimality and Harmonic Ordering
23(8)
The Grammar Learning Problem
31(2)
Constraint Demotion
33(20)
The Principle of Constraint Demotion
33(10)
Analysis of Constraint Demotion
43(7)
Error-Driven Constraint Demotion
50(3)
Overcoming Ambiguity in Overt Forms
53(22)
An Optimality Theoretic System of Stress Grammars
53(4)
Robust Interpretive Parsing
57(3)
The RIP/CD Learning Procedure
60(2)
Getting Stuck: How RIP/CD Can Fail
62(6)
Simulation Results: Metrical Stress
68(2)
Discussion
70(5)
Issues in Language Learning
75(10)
The Subset Principle, Richness of the Base, and Acquisition Theory
75(2)
Learning Underlying Forms
77(8)
Learnability and Linguistic Theory
85(6)
Parametric Independence and Linguistic Explanation
85(1)
Summary
86(5)
Correctness and Data Complexity of Constraint Demotion
91(20)
Stratified Hierarchies
91(1)
The Target Stratified Hierarchy
92(2)
Constraint Demotion
94(3)
Extension to Arbitrary Initial Hierarchies
97(2)
Error-Driven Constraint Demotion
99(2)
Recursive Constraint Demotion
101(10)
Production-Directed Parsing
111(18)
The Parsing Problem in Optimality Theory
111(2)
Formalizing CVT
113(2)
Parsing with CVT
115(8)
A Sample Parse
123(3)
Interpretive Parsing
126(1)
Discussion
126(2)
The Rest of the Operations Set
128(1)
Notes 129(4)
References 133(6)
Index 139

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