Read The Language Instinct: How the Mind Creates Language Online
Authors: Steven Pinker
7.
Talking Heads
Artificial Intelligence: Winston, 1992; Wallich, 1991;
The Economist
, 1992.Turing Test of whether machines can think: Turing, 1950.
ELIZA:
Weizenbaum, 1976.Loebner Prize competition: Shieber, in press.
Fast comprehension: Garrett, 1990; Marslen-Wilson, 1975.
Style: Williams, 1990.
Parsing: Smith, 1991; Ford, Bresnan, & Kaplan, 1982; Wanner & Maratsos, 1978; Yngve, 1960; Kaplan, 1972; Berwick et al., 1991; Wanner, 1988; Joshi, 1991; Gibson, in press.
Magical number seven: Miller, 1956.
Dangling sentences: Yngve, 1960; Bever, 1970; Williams, 1990.
Memory and grammatical load: Bever, 1970; Kuno, 1974; Hawkins, 1988.
Right-, left-, and center-embedding: Yngve, 1960; Miller & Chomsky, 1963; Miller, 1967; Kuno, 1974; Chomsky, 1965.
Number of rules for child to learn: Pinker, 1984.
Breadth-first dictionary lookup: Swinney, 1979; Seidenberg et al., 1982.
Killer sentenced to die twice: Columbia Journalism Review, 1980; Lederer, 1987.
Garden path sentences: Bever, 1970; Ford, Bresnan, & Kaplan, 1982; Wanner, 1988; Gibson, in press.
Multiple trees in memory: MacDonald, Just, and Carpenter, 1992; Gibson, in press.
Modularity of mind: Fodor, 1983. Modularity debate: Fodor, 1985; Garfield, 1987; Marslen-Wilson, 1989.
General smarts and understanding sentences: Trueswell, Tanenhaus, and Garnsey, in press.
Verbs help parsing, pro and con: Trueswell, Tanenhaus, & Kello, in press; Ford et al., 1982; Frazier, 1989; Ferreira & Henderson, 1990.
Computer parsers: Joshi, 1991.
Late closure and minimal attachment, pro and con: Frazier & Fodor, 1978; Ford et al., 1982; Wanner, 1988; Garfield, 1987.
The language of judges: Solan, 1993. Language and law: Tiersma, 1993.
Fillers and gaps: Wanner & Maratsos, 1978; Bever & McElree, 1988; MacDonald, 1989; Nicol & Swinney, 1989; Garnsey, Tanenhaus, & Chapman, 1989; Kluender & Kutas, 1993; J. D. Fodor, 1989.
Shortening filler-gap distances: Bever, 1970; Yngve, 1960; Williams, 1990. Bounding phrase movement to help parsing: Berwick & Weinberg, 1984.
Watergate transcripts: Committee on the Judiciary, U.S. House of Representatives, 1974;
New York Times
Staff, 1974.Masson
v.
The New Yorker Magazine: Time
, July 1, 1991, p. 68;
Newsweek
, July 1, 1991, p. 67.Discourse, pragmatics, and inference: Grice, 1975; Levinson, 1983; Sperber & Wilson, 1986; Leech, 1983; Clark & Clark, 1977.
Scripts and stereotypes: Schanck & Riesbeck, 1981. Programming common sense: Freedman, 1990; Wallich, 1991; Lenat & Guha, 1990.
Logic of conversation: Grice, 1975; Sperber & Wilson, 1986.
Letter of recommendation: Grice, 1975; Norman & Rumelhart, 1975.
Politeness: Brown & Levinson, 1987.
Conduit metaphor: Lakoff & Johnson, 1980.
8.
The Tower of Babel
Variation without limit: Joos, 1957, p. 96. One Earthly language: Chomsky, 1991.
Language differences: Crystal, 1987; Comrie, 1990; Department of Linguistics, Ohio State University.
Language universals: Greenberg, 1963; Greenberg, Ferguson, & Moravscik, 1978; Comrie, 1981; Hawkins, 1988; Shopen, 1985; Keenan, 1976; Bybee, 1985.
History versus typology: Kiparsky, 1976; Wang, 1976; Aronoff, 1987.
SOV, SVO, and center-embedding: Kuno, 1974.
Crosslinguistic meaning of “subject”: Keenan, 1976; Pinker, 1984, 1987.
Human versus animal communication: Hockett, 1960.
Evolution disfavoring change for change’s sake: Williams, 1966.
Babel speeds evolution: Dyson, 1979; Babel provides women: Crystal, 1987, p. 42.
Languages and species: Darwin, 1874, p. 106.
Evolution of innateness and learning: Williams, 1966; Lewontin, 1966; Hinton & Nowlan, 1987.
Why there is language learning: Pinker & Bloom, 1990.
Linguistic innovation as contagious disease: Cavalli-Sforza & Feldman, 1981.
Reanalysis and language change: Aitchison, 1991; Samuels, 1972; Kiparsky, 1976; Pyles & Algeo, 1982; Department of Linguistics, Ohio State University, 1991.
American English: Cassidy, 1985; Bryson, 1990.
History of English: Jespersen, 1938/1982; Pyles & Algeo, 1982; Aitchison, 1991; Samuels, 1972; Bryson, 1990; Department of Linguistics, Ohio State University, 1991.
Apprehending adolescents and catching kids: Williams, 1991.
The Great Vowel Shift as dudespeak: Burling, 1992.
Germanic and Indo-European: Pyles & Algeo, 1982; Renfrew, 1987; Crystal, 1987.
First European farmers: Renfrew, 1987; Ammerman & Cavalli-Sforza, 1984; Sokal, Oden, & Wilson, 1991; Roberts, 1992.
Language families: Comrie, 1990; Crystal, 1987; Ruhlen, 1987; Katzner, 1977.
Language of the Americas: Greenberg, 1987; Cavalli-Sforza et al., 1988; Diamond, 1990.
Language lumpers: Wright, 1991; Ross, 1991; Shevoroshkin & Markey, 1986.
Correlations between genes and language families: Cavalli-Sforza et al., 1988; Cavalli-Sforza, 1991. African Eve: Stringer & Andrews, 1988; Stringer, 1990; Gibbons, 1993.
Genes and languages in Europe: Harding & Sokal, 1988. Lack of correlation between language families and genetic groups: Guy, 1992.
Proto-World: Shevoroshkin, 1990; Wright, 1991; Ross, 1991.
Language extinctions: Hale et al., 1992.
Another perspective on language extinctions: Ladefoged, 1992.
9.
Baby Born Talking—Describes Heaven
Infant speech perception: Eimas et al., 1971; Werker, 1991.
Learning French in utero: Mehler et al., 1988.
Infants learn phonemes: Kuhl et al., 1992.
Babbling: Locke, 1992; Petitto & Marentette, 1991.
Babbling robots: Jordon & Rosenbaum, 1989.
First words: Clark, 1993; Ingram, 1989.
Finding word boundaries: Peters, 1983. Children’s examples are from Peters, family memories,
Life
magazine, and MIT librarian Pat Claffey. The
Hill Street Blues
example is from Mark Aronoff.First word combinations: Braine, 1976; Brown, 1973; Pinker, 1984; Ingram, 1989.
Infant comprehension: Hirsh-Pasek & Golinkoff, 1991.
Speech bottleneck in children: Brown, 1973, p. 205.
Language blasts off: Ingram, 1989, p. 235; Brown, 1973; Limber, 1973; Pinker, 1984; Bickerton, 1992.
Adam and Eve: Brown, 1973; MacWhinney, 1991.
Children avoid tempting errors: Stromswold, 1990.
Language acquisition across the globe: Slobin, 1985, 1992.
Alligator goed kerplunk: Marcus, Pinker, Ullman, Hollander, Rosen, & Xu, 1992.
Don’t giggle me: Bowerman, 1982; Pinker, 1989.
Wild children: Tartter, 1986; Curtiss, 1989; Rymer, 1993.
Thurber & White: from “Is Sex Necessary?” Example from Donald Symons.
Language from television: Ervin-Tripp, 1973. Understanding Motherese from content words: Slobin, 1977. Children as mind-readers: Pinker, 1979, 1984.
Motherese: Newport, et al., 1977; Fernald, 1992.
Mute child: Stromswold, 1994.
No parental feedback: Brown & Hanlon, 1970; Braine, 1971; Morgan & Travis, 1989; Marcus, 1993.
Learning language without feedback: Pinker, 1979, 1984, 1989; Wexler & Culicover, 1980; Osherson, Stob, & Weinstein, 1985; Berwick, 1985; Marcus et al., 1992.
Language acquisition close up: Pinker, 1979, 1984; Wexler & Culicover, 1980.
Human versus other primate gestation periods: Corballis, 1991.
Brain growth & language development: Bates, Thal, & Janowsky, 1992; Locke, 1992; Huttenlocher, 1990.
Children’s language in evolution: Williams, 1966.
Linguistic development and motor development: Lenneberg, 1967.
Foreign language learning: Hakuta, 1986; Grosjean, 1982; Bley-Vroman, 1990; Birdsong, 1989.
Critical ages for second language acquisition: Lieberman, 1984; Bley-Vroman, 1990; Newport, 1990; Long, 1990.
Critical periods for first language acquisition: Deaf: Newport, 1990. Genie: Curtiss, 1989; Rymer, 1992. Isabelle: Tartter, 1986. Chelsea: Curtiss, 1989.
Recovery from brain injury: Curtiss, 1989; Lenneberg, 1967.
Biology of the life cycle: Williams, 1966.
Evolution of the critical period: Hurford, 1991.
Senescence: Williams, 1957; Medawar, 1957.
10.
Language Organs and Grammar Genes
Associated Press story: February 11, 1992. Kilpatrick: Universal Press Syndicate, February 28, 1992. Bombeck: March 5, 1992.
Broca: Caplan, 1987. Language on the left: Caplan, 1987, 1992; Corballis, 1991; Geschwind, 1979; Geschwind & Galaburda, 1987; Gazzaniga, 1983.
Left-hemisphere language and the Psalms: example from Michael Corballis.
Language affects scalp electrodes: Neville et al., 1991; Kluender & Kutas, 1993.
Language lights up brains: Wallesch et al., 1985; Peterson et al., 1988, 1990; Mazoyer et al., 1992; Zatorre et al., 1992; Poeppel, 1993.
Language, not language-like stimuli and responses, in the left: Gardner, 1974; Etcoff, 1986. Sign language in the left, gesturing the right: Poizner, Klima, & Bellugi, 1990; Corina, Vaid, & Bellugi, 1992.
Bilateral symmetry: Corballis, 1991. Symmetry is sexy: Cronin, 1992.
Twisted chordates: Kinsbourne, 1978. Snail anatomy: Buchsbaum, 1948.
Lopsided animals: Corballis, 1991.
Lopsided brains: Corballis, 1991; Kosslyn, 1987; Gazzaniga, 1978, 1989.
Southpaws: Corballis, 1991; Coren, 1992. Parsing by relatives of southpaws: Bever et al., 1989.
Perisylvian cortex as the language organ: Caplan, 1987; Gazzaniga, 1989.
Peter Hogan’s aphasia: Goodglass, 1973.
Broca’s aphasia: Caplan, 1987, 1992; Gardner, 1974; Zurif, 1989.
ERP and PET pick up language in left anterior perisylvian: Kluender & Kutas, 1993; Neville et al., 1991; Mazoyer et al., 1992; Wallesch et al., 1985; Stromswold, Caplan, & Alpert, 1993.
Anatomy of Broca’s aphasia: Caplan, 1987; Dronkers et al., 1992. Parkinson’s and language: Lieberman et al., 1992. Broca’s aphasics detect ungrammaticality: Linebarger, Schwartz, & Saffran, 1983; Cornell, Fromkin, & Mauner, 1993.
Wernicke’s aphasic: Gardner, 1974.
Wernicke’s and related aphasias: Gardner, 1974; Geschwind, 1979; Caplan, 1987, 1992.
Anomia: Gardner, 1974; Caplan, 1987. The man with no nouns: Baynes & Iven, 1991.
Words and EEG’s: Neville et al., 1991. Words and PET: Peterson et al., 1990; Poeppel, 1993.
Different aphasias in different people: Caplan, 1987, 1992; Miceli et al., 1989. Losing derivational morphology while keeping inflectional morphology: Miceli & Caramazza, 1988.
Banananomia: Warrington & McCarthy, 1987; Hillis & Caramazza, 1991; Hart, Berndt, & Caramazza, 1985; Farah, 1990.
Anomalies and variation in language localization: Caplan, 1987; Basso et al., 1985; Bates, Thal, & Janowsky, 1992.
Visual areas: Hubel, 1988. Neuroscience: Gazzaniga, 1992; see also the special issue of
Scientific American
on “Mind and Brain,” September 1992.Stimulation of circumscribed but variable language spots: Ojemann & Whitaker, 1978; Ojemann, 1991.
Words as hubs: Damasio and Damasio, 1992.
Moving language around in baby brains: Curtiss, 1989; Caplan, 1987; Bates, Thal, & Janowsky, 1992; Basso et al., 1985.
Functional MRI: Belliveau et al., 1991; MEG: Gallen, 1994.
Computing in neural networks: McCulloch & Pitts, 1943; Rumelhart & McClelland, 1986.
Computing language in neural networks: McClelland & Rumelhart, 1986; Pinker & Prince, 1988; Pinker & Mehler, 1988.
Neural development: Rakic, 1988; Shatz, 1992; Dodd & Jessell, 1988; von der Malsburg & Singer, 1988.
Transgenic pig: Brian Duffy, North America Syndicate.
Genetics of stuttering and dyslexia: Ludlow & Cooper, 1983. Genetics of SLI: Gopnik & Crago, 1991; Gopnik, 1993; Stromswold, 1994. Pronunciation errors in twins: Locke & Mather, 1989. Grammar in twins: Mather & Black, 1984; Munsinger & Douglas, 1976; Fahey, Kamitomo, & Cornell, 1978; Bishop, North, & Donlan, 1993; Adopted babies’ language development: Hardy-Brown, Plomin, & DeFries, 1981.
Three generations of SLI: Gopnik, 1990a, 1990b, 1993; Gopnik & Crago, 1991.
Universal human nature and individual uniqueness: Tooby & Cosmides, 1990a.
Separated at birth: Holden, 1987; Lykken et al., 1992.
Behavior genetics: Bouchard et al., 1990; Lykken et al., 1992; Plomin, 1990.
Bushspeak: The Editors of
The New Republic
, 1992. Quaylespeak: Goldsman, 1992.Linguistic geniuses: Yogi Berra, from Safire, 1991; Lederer, 1987. Dr. Seuss (Theodore Geisel), from
On Beyond Zebra
, 1955. Nabokov, from
Lolita
, 1958. King, from the march on Washington, 1963. Shakespeare, from
Hamlet
, Act 2, Scene 2.
11.
The Big Bang
Elephants: Williams, 1989; Carrington, 1958.
Darwinian explanations of the language instinct: Pinker & Bloom, 1990; Pinker, in press; Hurford, 1989, 1991; Newmeyer, 1991; Brandon & Hornstein, 1986; Corballis, 1991.
Animal communication: Wilson, 1972; Gould and Marler, 1987.
Nonlinguistic communication and the brain: Deacon, 1988, 1989; Caplan, 1987; Myers, 1976; Robinson, 1976.
Gua and Viki: Tartter, 1986.
Sarah: Premack & Premack, 1972; Premack, 1985. Kanzi: Savage-Rumbaugh, 1991; Greenfield & Savage-Rumbaugh, 1991. Washoe: Gardner & Gardner, 1969, 1974. Koko: Patterson, 1978. See Wallman, 1992, for a review.
Nice guys in the animal kingdom: Sagan & Druyan, 1992. Quotation from excerpt in
Parade
magazine, September 20, 1992.Nim: Terrace, 1979; Terrace et al., 1979. Ape language debunkers: Terrace et al., 1979; Seidenberg & Petitto, 1979; Petitto & Seidenberg, 1979; Seidenberg, 1986; Seidenberg & Petitto, 1987; Petitto, 1988; see Wallman, 1992, for a review. Threatened lawsuit: Wallman, 1992, p. 5.
Deaf signer observing chimps: Neisser, 1983, pp. 214–216.
The misbehavior of organisms: Breland & Breland, 1961.
Bates on Big Bangs: Bates, Thal, & Marchman, 1991, pp. 30, 35.
Chains, ladders, and bushes in evolution: Mayr, 1982; Dawkins, 1986; Gould, 1985.
Featherless biped: example from Wallman, 1992.
Logical impossibility of the liver: Lieberman, 1990, pp. 741–742.
New modules in evolution: Mayr, 1982.
Broca’s area in monkeys: Deacon, 1988, 1989; Galaburda & Pandya, 1982.
Chimp and human DNA: King & Wilson, 1975; Miyamoto, Slightom, & Goodman, 1987.
Bow-wow, ding-dong, gestural, and other theories of transitional language: Harnad, Steklis, & Lancaster, 1976.
Dating language origins: Pinker, 1992, in press; Bickerton, 1990. Evolution of modern humans: Stringer & Andrews, 1988; Stringer, 1990; Gibbons, 1993.
Descent of larynx and Neanderthal speech: Lieberman, 1984. Neanderthal fans: Gibbons, 1992. Heimlich maneuver:
Parade
, June 28, 1992.Chomsky denigrates natural selection: Chomsky, 1972, pp. 97–98; Chomsky, 1988, p. 167.
Logic of natural selection: Darwin, 1859/1964; Williams, 1966, 1992; Mayr, 1983; Dawkins, 1986; Tooby & Cosmides, 1990b; Maynard Smith, 1984, 1986; Dennett, 1983.
Just-so stories: Gould & Lewontin, 1979; Piatelli-Palmarini, 1989. It’s just not so: Dawkins, 1986; Mayr, 1983; Maynard Smith, 1988; Tooby & Cosmides, 1990a, b; Pinker & Bloom, 1990; Dennett, 1983.
Natural language and natural selection: Pinker & Bloom, 1990.
Chomsky on the physics of brains: in Piatelli-Palmarini, 1980.
Language in dwarfs: Lenneberg, 1967. Language in normal hydrocephalics: Lewin, 1980. Normal brains and analytic processing in SLI: Gopnik, 1990b.
The throwing madonna: Calvin, 1991.
Demystifying language evolution: Pinker & Bloom, 1990.
Bates on three quarters of a rule: Bates, Thal, & Marchman, 1991, p. 31.
Bickerton on protolanguage and the Big Bang: Bickerton, 1990; Pinker, 1992.
Premack on mastodon-hunters: Premack, 1985, pp. 281–282.
Advantages of complex language: Burling, 1986. Cognitive arms race: Cosmides & Tooby, 1992. Gossip: Barkow, 1992. Some of the passages in this section are based on Pinker & Bloom, 1990.
Descent versus modification: Tooby & Cosmides, 1989.