Pattern deduction in linguistically attested and unattested grammars

A popular hypothesis in linguistics posits that language learners are biologically predisposed to learn structures attested in human language – for example, a hierarchically nested phrase structure, while eschewing hypotheses for linguistically unattested structures – for example, one consisting of...

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Published inProceedings of the Linguistic Society of America Vol. 10; no. 1; p. 5955
Main Authors Srinivas, Sadhwi, Harrigan, Kaitlyn, Burnham, Aidan, Voivoda, Nicholas, Wilkins, Berit
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 04.06.2025
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ISSN2473-8689
2473-8689
DOI10.3765/plsa.v10i1.5955

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Summary:A popular hypothesis in linguistics posits that language learners are biologically predisposed to learn structures attested in human language – for example, a hierarchically nested phrase structure, while eschewing hypotheses for linguistically unattested structures – for example, one consisting of non-consecutive, linearly alternating “constituents”. The current study explores the robustness of such a predisposition within a controlled artificial language learning task as well as a non-linguistic, general puzzle-solving task. We find evidence that suggests learners more easily acquire linguistically attested hierarchically structured patterns compared to unattested non-hierarchical ones within the non-linguistic task, but not within the language task. We discuss the puzzling nature of this finding, and some work in progress to further unravel the source of this result.
ISSN:2473-8689
2473-8689
DOI:10.3765/plsa.v10i1.5955