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The rise and fall of English inflectional morphology

Abstract:
Children acquire noun inflections before they acquire verb inflections. Noun inflections are also less affected by language disorders than verb inflections. We describe a single-system connectionist model of English noun and verb inflection which captures these facts of acquisition and atrophy, as well as other well-established developmental characteristics such as U-shaped learning and the ability to generalise to novel forms. The model makes the novel experimental prediction that irregular nouns are less affected by damage than irregular verbs, even though irregular nouns are harder to learn.
Publication status:
Published

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Journal:
PROCEEDINGS OF THE TWENTIETH ANNUAL CONFERENCE OF THE COGNITIVE SCIENCE SOCIETY More from this journal
Pages:
549-554
Publication date:
1998-01-01
Event title:
20th Annual Conference of the Cognitive-Science-Society
ISBN:
0805832319


Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:17737
UUID:
uuid:148640ed-7e2e-430a-9133-ea9588a3b3f9
Local pid:
pubs:17737
Source identifiers:
17737
Deposit date:
2012-12-19
ARK identifier:

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