| Current
Projects
Self-organizing neural network models of language
acquisition
Self-organization is an important process of human
experience. In many contexts of learning and representation, we
do not rely on explicit instruction about what is correct or incorrect
to learn, but instead gather information about the “input
space” (i.e., the limits, constraints, and possibilities of
things) and organize information in such a way that we can optimally
perform a given task. In the case of language, it has been debated
whether learners use corrective feedback to learn or to organize
speech, grammar, or lexicon. We would like to consider human learning
as a self-organizing process, and that the activities reflected
in our self-organizing network (organization, competition, and associations)
can capture the nature of language acquisition, representation,
and processing. In this project, we build and expand on DevLex,
a self-organizing neural network model, and make it a cognitively
and neuropsychologically plausible model that can account for a
wide variety of phenomena in language. Our model incorporates properties
of self-organization, Hebbian learning, lexical co-occurrences learning,
and dynamic growth. These properties make the model well suited
for the study of the mental lexicon, its structure, representation,
and processing in children, normal adults, second language learners,
and brain-injured patients.
Crosslinguistic studies
A large body of knowledge has accumulated
especially in the last three decades on the cognitive processes
and brain mechanisms underlying language use, language acquisition,
and language disorders. Much of this knowledge has come from studies
of Indo-European languages, in particular, English. Some researchers
believe that because of the universal principles of language, theories
of language and language processing should apply in the same way
to all languages even if they are built on facts from specific languages.
Others, however, think that language-specific variations are sufficiently
strong to warrant different conceptualizations of linguistic principles
and cognitive underpinnings for different languages. Unlike generative
theories of language, this second perspective itself is a mixed
bag, from the strongest form of the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis that
argues for linguistic determinism to modern-day psycholinguistic
theories that emphasize language variation and competition. The
tension between these two perspectives has yielded much debate in
the cognitive and psycholinguistic studies of language, and it is
against this backdrop that we do our crosslinguistic research in
lexical representation and ambiguity processing, sentence interpretation,
and bilingual lexical and sentence processing.
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