Language Processing and Language Acquisition
Language Processing and Language Acquisition by Lyn Frazier, published by Springer Science & Business Media in September 1990, explores the intersection of language processing and language acquisition. This edition, comprising 398 pages, addresses the often-overlooked principles and mechanisms of language processing in the context of acquiring grammatical knowledge. The book critiques the tendency in linguistic studies to neglect processing factors, arguing for a more integrated approach that considers how these factors influence grammar acquisition.
Readers will find a thorough examination of how language processing routines can inform our understanding of grammar acquisition. Frazier discusses the implications of parsing strategies and their role in language development, emphasizing the need for explicit models that clarify how processing routines apply to new linguistic inputs. This work contributes to the fields of psycholinguistics and linguistics, offering insights that challenge traditional views on the relationship between language performance and grammar acquisition.
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Studies of language acqUiSItion have largely ignored processing prin ciples and mechanisms. Not surprisingly, questions concerning the analysis of an informative linguistic input – the potential evidence for grammatical parameter setting – have also been ignored. Especially in linguistic approaches to language acquisition, the role of language processing has not been prominent. With few exceptions (e. g. Goodluck and Tavakolian, 1982; Pinker, 1984) discussions of language perform ance tend to arise only when experimental debris, the artifact of some experiment, needs to be cleared away. Consequently, language pro cessing has been viewed as a collection of rather uninteresting perform ance factors obscuring the true object of interest, namely, grammar acquisition. On those occasions when parsing “strategies” have been incorporated into accounts of language development, they have often been discussed as vague preferences, not open to rigorous analysis. In principle, however, theories of language comprehension can and should be subjected to the same criteria of explicitness and explanatoriness as other theories, e. g. , theories of grammar. Thus their peripheral role in accounts of language development may reflect accidental factors, rather than any inherent fuzziness or irrelevance to the language acquisition problem. It seems probable that an explicit model of the way(s) processing routines are applied in acquisition would help solve some central problems of grammar acquisition, since these routines regulate the application of grammatical knowledge to novel inputs.
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