Thurs (1/12): Steven Pinker on Language Models
Mark Gluck
netlist at psych.Stanford.EDU
Wed Jan 11 09:29:01 EST 1989
Stanford University Interdisciplinary Colloquium Series:
Adaptive Networks and their Applications
Jan. 12th (Thursday, 3:30pm):
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STEVEN PINKER CONNECTIONISM AND
Department of Brain & Cognitive Sciences THE FACTS OF HUMAN LANGUAGE
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
email: steve at psyche.mit.edu (with commentary by David Rumelhart)
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Abstract
Connectionist modeling holds the promise of making important
contributions to our understanding of human language. For example,
such models can explore the role of parallel processing, constraint
satisfaction, neurologically realistic architectures, and efficient
pattern-matching in linguistic processes.
However, the current connectionist program of language modeling seems
to be motivated by a different set of goals: reviving classical
associationism, elminating levels of linguistic representation, and
maximizing the role of top-down, knowledge-driven processing.
I present evidence (developed in collaboration with Alan Prince) that
these goals are ill-advised, because the empirical assumptions they
make about human language are simply false. Specifically, evidence
from adults' and children's abilities with morphology, semantics, and
syntax suggests that people possess formal linguistic rules and
autonomous linguistic representations, which are not based on the
statistical correlations among microfeatures that current
connectionist models rely on so heavily.
Moreover, I suggest that treating the existence of
mentally-represented rules and representations as an empirical
question will lead to greater progress than rejecting them on a priori
methodological grounds. The data suggest that some linguistic
processes are saliently rule-like, and call for a suitable
symbol-processing architecture, whereas others are associative, and
can be insightfully modeled using connectionist mechanisms. Thus
taking the facts of human language seriously can lead to an
interesting rapprochement between standard psycholinguistics and
connectionist modeling.
Additional Information
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Location: Room 380-380F, which can be reached through the lower level
between the Psychology and Mathematical Sciences buildings.
Technical Level: These talks will be technically oriented and are intended
for persons actively working in related areas. They are not intended
for the newcomer seeking general introductory material.
Mailing lists: To be added to the network mailing list, netmail to
netlist at psych.stanford.edu. For additional information, or contact
Mark Gluck (gluck at psych.stanford.edu).
Co-Sponsored by: Departments of Electrical Engineering (B. Widrow) and
Psychology (D. Rumelhart, M. Pavel, M. Gluck), Stanford Univ.
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