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Hits 61 – 80 of 44.080

61
Persons and Pronouns : Exploring Clitics in Judeo-Spanish
Kurtz, Naomi. - 2022
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62
A multidimensional analysis of the Spanish reportative epistemic evidential dizque
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63
Serial verb constructions and the syntax-prosody interface
Tyler, M; Kastner, I. - : Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022. : Natural Language and Linguistic Theory, 2022
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64
Las estructuras de dativo simpatético en lengua alemana: ¿dativo, o también ‘acusativo simpatético’? ; Structures of the sympathetic dative in german: dative or also “sympathetic accusative”?
In: Pragmalingüística, (29), 245-261 (2022)
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65
Automated written corrective feedback: Error-correction performance and timing of delivery
Ranalli, Jim; Yamashita, Taichi. - : University of Hawaii National Foreign Language Resource Center, 2022. : Center for Language & Technology, 2022. : (co-sponsored by Center for Open Educational Resources and Language Learning, University of Texas at Austin), 2022
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66
Register effects and the Spanish adjectival construction sin + INF in historical corpus data
Yamada, Aaron. - 2022
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67
Joint learning of morphology and syntax with cross-level contextual information flow
In: 2022 ; 1 ; 33 (2022)
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68
When Church Slavonic meets Latin: Tradition vs. Innovation
Tomelleri. - : De Gruyter, 2022. : country:DEU, 2022. : place:Berlin, 2022
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69
A CORPUS STUDY OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE ADJECTIVE PHRASE IN FRENCH CHILDREN
In: Theses and Dissertations--Linguistics (2022)
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70
Language Interfaces in Adult Heritage Language Acquisition: A Study on Encoding of Nominal Reference in Mandarin Chinese as a Heritage Language
In: Modern and Classical Languages, Literatures and Cultures Faculty Publications (2022)
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71
Investigating the relationship between individual differences and island sensitivity
Pham, Catherine; Covey, Lauren; Gabriele, Alison. - : Ubiquity Press, 2022
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72
How Well Do LSTM Language Models Learn Filler-gap Dependencies?
In: Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics (2022)
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73
Evaluating Structural Economy Claims in Relative Clause Attachment
In: Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics (2022)
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74
Incremental Acquisition of a Minimalist Grammar using an SMT-Solver
In: Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics (2022)
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75
Can language models capture syntactic associations without surface cues? A case study of reflexive anaphor licensing in English control constructions
In: Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics (2022)
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76
Universal Dependencies and Semantics for English and Hebrew Child-directed Speech
In: Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics (2022)
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77
Learning Constraints on Wh-Dependencies by Learning How to Efficiently Represent Wh-Dependencies: A Developmental Modeling Investigation With Fragment Grammars
In: Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics (2022)
Abstract: It’s hotly contested how children learn constraints on wh-dependencies, called syntactic islands. When learning this knowledge, a prerequisite is knowing how to represent wh-dependencies so that constraints can be hypothesized over those representations. Previous work has explained disparate sets of syntactic island constraints by assuming different wh-dependency representations, without a unified dependency representation capturing all these constraints. We implement a modeled learner who learns a Fragment Grammar (FG) representation of wh-dependencies–a representation comprised of potentially different-sized fragments that combine to form full dependencies–that best accounts for the input while being as compact as possible. This efficient wh-dependency representation can then be used to generate any wh-dependency’s probability, and so predict acceptability patterns for stimuli sets that reveal syntactic island knowledge. We find that the identified FG can generate the attested acceptability judgment patterns for all syntactic islands previously investigated, highlighting how implicit knowledge of wh-dependency constraints can emerge from trying to learn to efficiently represent wh-dependencies more generally. We additionally compare the FG representation’s performance against baselines inspired by previous proposals, finding that one baseline also yields equivalent performance. We discuss how this baseline is similar to and different from the FG representation.
Keyword: Computational Linguistics; developmental modeling; efficient representation; First and Second Language Acquisition; Fragment Grammar; syntactic islands; Syntax; wh-dependencies
URL: https://scholarworks.umass.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1255&context=scil
https://scholarworks.umass.edu/scil/vol5/iss1/22
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78
Typological Implications of Tier-Based Strictly Local Movement
In: Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics (2022)
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79
Parsing Early Modern English for Linguistic Search
In: Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics (2022)
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80
The Linearization of V(P)-doubling Constructions
In: Doctoral Dissertations (2022)
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