Joanisse M F, Seidenberg M S
Neuroscience Program, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089-2520, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1999 Jun 22;96(13):7592-7. doi: 10.1073/pnas.96.13.7592.
The formation of the past tense of verbs in English has been the focus of the debate concerning connectionist vs. symbolic accounts of language. Brain-injured patients differ with respect to whether they are more impaired in generating irregular past tenses (TAKE-TOOK) or past tenses for nonce verbs (WUG-WUGGED). Such dissociations have been taken as evidence for distinct "rule" and "associative" memory systems in morphology and against the connectionist approach in which a single system is used for all forms. We describe a simulation model in which these impairments arise from damage to phonological or semantic information, which have different effects on generalization and irregular forms, respectively. The results provide an account of the bases of impairments in verb morphology and show that these impairments can be explained within connectionist models that do not use rules or a separate mechanism for exceptions.
英语动词过去式的形成一直是关于语言的联结主义与符号主义解释之争的焦点。脑损伤患者在生成不规则过去式(TAKE - TOOK)或临时动词的过去式(WUG - WUGGED)时,受损程度存在差异。这种分离现象被视为形态学中存在不同的“规则”和“联想”记忆系统的证据,也与联结主义方法相悖,后者认为单一系统适用于所有形式。我们描述了一个模拟模型,其中这些损伤源于语音或语义信息的损坏,它们分别对泛化和不规则形式产生不同影响。研究结果解释了动词形态损伤的根源,并表明这些损伤可以在不使用规则或单独的例外机制的联结主义模型中得到解释。