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El. knyga: Corpora in Language Acquisition Research: History, methods, perspectives

Edited by (University of Basel)
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Corpus research forms the backbone of research on children's language development. Leading researchers in the field present a survey on the history of data collection, different types of data, and the treatment of methodological problems. Morphologically and syntactically parsed corpora allow for the concise explorations of formal phenomena, the quick retrieval of errors, and reliability checks. New probabilistic and connectionist computations investigate how children integrate the multiple sources of information available in the input, and new statistical methods compute rates of acquisition as well as error rates dependent on sample size. Sample analyses show how multi-modal corpora are used to investigate the interaction of discourse and linguistic structure, how cross-linguistic generalizations for acquisition can be formulated and tested, and how individual variation can be explored. Finally, ways in which corpus research interacts with computational linguistics and experimental research are presented.

Recenzijos

As already stated, this volume is aimed at a fairly narrow audience and the quality of the work presented should make it a valuable resource for this intended audience. Apart from very infrequent and insignificant spelling errors all papers are well written and researched. I would have preferred to have reference sections at the end of each chapter as opposed to one general reference section for the entire volume. I am also somewhat concerned about the fact that virtually all authors defend 'usage based' models of acquisition and believe that the inclusion of at least one or two chapters defending an opposing view (UG) might have resulted in a book that better reflects the still existing diversity of language acquisition views and engages the dialogue with proponents of such views. But this does not diminish the quality of the work presented and I would recommend the volume without hesitation. -- Christina Behme, Dalhousie University, in Metapsychology Reviews Online, 2009

List of contributors
vii
Preface ix
Corpora in language acquisition research: History, methods, perspectives
xi
Heike Behrens
How big is big enough? Assessing the reliability of data from naturalistic samples
1(24)
Caroline F. Rowland
Sarah L. Fletcher
Daniel Freudenthal
Core morphology in child directed speech: Crosslinguistic corpus analyses of noun plurals
25(36)
Dorit Ravid
Wolfgang U. Dressler
Bracha Nir-Sagiv
Katharina Korecky-Kroll
Agnita Souman
Katja Rehfeldt
Sabine Laaha
Johannes Bertl
Hans Basbøll
Steven Gillis
Learning the English auxiliary: A usage-based approach
61(38)
Elena Lieven
Using corpora to examine discourse effects in syntax
99(40)
Shanley Allen
Barbora Skarabela
Mary Hughes
Integration of multiple probabilistic cues in syntax acquisition
139(26)
Padraic Monaghan
Morten H. Christiansen
Enriching CHILDES for morphosyntactic analysis
165(34)
Brian MacWhinney
Exploiting corpora for language acquisition research
199(8)
Katherine Demuth
References 207(23)
Index 230