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Christiansen, M. H. and Chater, N. (1999) Toward a connectionist model of recursion in human linguistic performance. Cognitive Science, 23(2):157--205.

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1997-Recursive inconsistencies are hard to learn: A connectionist perspective on universal word order correlations - Christiansen,Devlin :: 18
2001-Sequential learning in non-human primates - Conway,Christiansen :: 7
2002-The role of sequential learning in language evolution: Computational and experimental studies - Christiansen,Dale,Ellefson,Conway :: 7
2001-On the Origins of Linguistic Structure: Computational models of the evolution of language - Tonkes :: 7
2004-The processing of verbs and nouns in neural networks: Insights from Synthetic Brain Imaging - Cangelosi,Parisi :: 6
2002-Symbol Grounding and the Symbolic Theft Hypothesis - Cangelosi,Greco,Harnad :: 6
2004-Self-organization and Language Evolution: System, Population and Individual - Ke :: 4
2002-A Unified Simulation Scenario for Language Development, Evolution, and Historical Change - Parisi,Cangelosi :: 4
1998-A paradox of neural encoders and decoders, or, why don't we talk backwards? - Tonkes,Blair,Wiles :: 3
2006-Working backwards from modern language to proto-grammar - Johansson :: 1
2005-Multiple-cue integration in language acquisition: A connectionist model of speech segmentation and rule-like behavior - Christiansen,Conway,Curtin :: 1
2008-Grammatical pattern learning by human infants and cotton-top tamarins monkeys - Saffran,Hauser,Siebel,Kapfhamer,Tsao,Cushman ::
2007-Organization of the state space of a simple recurrent network before and after training on recursive linguistic structures - Cernansky,Makula,Benuskova ::
1998-Getting the Point Across: The Effect of Recurrent Network Biases on the Evolution of a Simple Language - Tonkes ::

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