On the Nature of Syntax

There is a tendency in science to proceed from descriptive methods towards an adequate explanatory theory and then move beyond its conclusions. Our purpose is to discover the concepts of computational efficiency in natural language that exclude redundancy, and to investigate how these relate to more...

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Main Author: Alona Soschen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PsychOpen GOLD/ Leibniz Institute for Psychology 2008-09-01
Series:Biolinguistics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5964/bioling.8641
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author Alona Soschen
author_facet Alona Soschen
author_sort Alona Soschen
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description There is a tendency in science to proceed from descriptive methods towards an adequate explanatory theory and then move beyond its conclusions. Our purpose is to discover the concepts of computational efficiency in natural language that exclude redundancy, and to investigate how these relate to more general principles. By developing the idea that linguistic structures possess the features of other biological systems this article focuses on the third factor that enters into the growth of language in the individual. It is suggested that the core principles of grammar can be observed in nature itself. The Faculty of Language is an efficient mechanism designed for the continuation of movement in compliance with optimization requirements. To illustrate that, a functional explanation of syntactic Merge is offered in this work, and an attempt is made to identify some criteria that single out this particular computational system as species-specific.
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spelling doaj.art-898b56221b054c0dac9012c55e317d482024-01-31T10:09:20ZengPsychOpen GOLD/ Leibniz Institute for PsychologyBiolinguistics1450-34172008-09-0122-319622410.5964/bioling.86418641On the Nature of SyntaxAlona Soschen0MITThere is a tendency in science to proceed from descriptive methods towards an adequate explanatory theory and then move beyond its conclusions. Our purpose is to discover the concepts of computational efficiency in natural language that exclude redundancy, and to investigate how these relate to more general principles. By developing the idea that linguistic structures possess the features of other biological systems this article focuses on the third factor that enters into the growth of language in the individual. It is suggested that the core principles of grammar can be observed in nature itself. The Faculty of Language is an efficient mechanism designed for the continuation of movement in compliance with optimization requirements. To illustrate that, a functional explanation of syntactic Merge is offered in this work, and an attempt is made to identify some criteria that single out this particular computational system as species-specific.https://doi.org/10.5964/bioling.8641argument structurefibonacci sequencelanguage facultyminimalismphasessyntactic mergethird factor
spellingShingle Alona Soschen
On the Nature of Syntax
Biolinguistics
argument structure
fibonacci sequence
language faculty
minimalism
phases
syntactic merge
third factor
title On the Nature of Syntax
title_full On the Nature of Syntax
title_fullStr On the Nature of Syntax
title_full_unstemmed On the Nature of Syntax
title_short On the Nature of Syntax
title_sort on the nature of syntax
topic argument structure
fibonacci sequence
language faculty
minimalism
phases
syntactic merge
third factor
url https://doi.org/10.5964/bioling.8641
work_keys_str_mv AT alonasoschen onthenatureofsyntax