On Learning the Past Tenses of English Verbs.

Abstract

This paper presents an alternative to the standard rule based account of a child's acquisition of the past tense in English. Children are typically said to pass through a three-phase acquisition process in which they first learn past tense by rote, then learn the past tense rule and over regularize, and then finally learn the exceptions to the rule. We show that the acquisition data can be accounted for in more detail by dispensing with the assumption that the child learns rules and substituting in its place a simple homogeneous learning procedure. We show how rule-like behavior can emerge from the interactions among a network of units encoding the root form to past tense mapping. A large computer simulation of the learning process demonstrates the operating principles of our alternative account, shows how details of the acquisition process not captured by the rule account emerge, and makes predictions about other details of the acquisition process not yet observed. Keywords: Learning; networks; Language; Verbs; Perceptions; Morphology.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Oct 01, 1985
Accession Number
ADA164233

Entities

People

  • David E. Rumelhart
  • James McClelland

Organizations

  • University of California, San Diego

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  • Biomedical
  • Energy and Power Technologies
  • Human Systems

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  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Books
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  • Computer Simulations
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  • Linguistics

Readers

  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Neural Network Machine Learning.
  • Speech Processing/Speech Recognition.