1. N. Chomsky. Aspects of the Theory of Syntax. MIT Press, 1965. | ||
2. M. H. Christiansen and N. Chater. Toward a connectionist model of recursion in human linguistic performance. Cognitive Science, In press., 1998. | UIUC | |
3. J. Elman. Distributed representations, simple recurrent networks and grammatical structure. Machine Learning, 7:195--224, 1991. | UIUC | |
4. J. Elman. Learning and development in neural networks: The importance of starting small. Cognition, 48:71--99, 1993. | UIUC | |
5. M. Hare and J. Elman. Learning and morphological change. Cognition, 56:61--98, 1995. | UIUC | |
6. S. Kirby. Fitness and the selective adaptation of language. In James Hurford, Chris Knight, and Michael Studdert-Kennedy, editors, Evolution of Language: Social and Cognitive Bases for the Emergence of Phonology and Syntax. in press, 1998. | UIUC | |
7. S. Lawrence, C. L. Giles, and S. Fong. Natural language grammatical inference with recurrent neural networks. To appear: IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering, 1998. | ||
8. C. Moore. Dynamical recognizers: Real-time language recognition by analog computers. Theoretical Computer Science, 201(1--2):99--136, July 1998. | ||
9. A. M. Turing. On computable numbers, with an application to entscheidungsproblem. Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society, Series 2, 42:230--265, 1936. | ||
10. J. Weckerly and J. Elman. A PDP approach to processing center-embedded sentences. In Proceedings of the Fourteenth Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, Hillsdale, NJ, 1992. Erlbaum. |
| HOME :: Back to the Paper :: References | Comments to: junwang4 you-know-at gmail.com | Last update: 2/3/09 |