Institute of Biology, Leiden University.
Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition, Leiden University.
Top Cogn Sci. 2020 Jul;12(3):804-814. doi: 10.1111/tops.12493. Epub 2020 Mar 5.
Human languages all have a grammar, that is, rules that determine how symbols in a language can be combined to create complex meaningful expressions. Despite decades of research, the evolutionary, developmental, cognitive, and computational bases of grammatical abilities are still not fully understood. "Artificial Grammar Learning" (AGL) studies provide important insights into how rules and structured sequences are learned, the relevance of these processes to language in humans, and whether the cognitive systems involved are shared with other animals. AGL tasks can be used to study how human adults, infants, animals, or machines learn artificial grammars of various sorts, consisting of rules defined typically over syllables, sounds, or visual items. In this introduction, we distill some lessons from the nine other papers in this special issue, which review the advances made from this growing body of literature. We provide a critical synthesis, identify the questions that remain open, and recognize the challenges that lie ahead. A key observation across the disciplines is that the limits of human, animal, and machine capabilities have yet to be found. Thus, this interdisciplinary area of research firmly rooted in the cognitive sciences has unearthed exciting new questions and venues for research, along the way fostering impactful collaborations between traditionally disconnected disciplines that are breaking scientific ground.
人类语言都有语法,也就是说,语法规则决定了语言中的符号如何组合,以创造出复杂而有意义的表达。尽管经过了几十年的研究,但语法能力的进化、发展、认知和计算基础仍未被完全理解。“人工语法学习”(AGL)研究为我们提供了重要的见解,了解规则和结构化序列是如何被学习的,这些过程与人类语言的相关性,以及所涉及的认知系统是否与其他动物共享。AGL 任务可用于研究人类成年人、婴儿、动物或机器如何学习各种类型的人工语法,这些语法通常由定义在音节、声音或视觉项目上的规则组成。在这篇介绍中,我们从本期特刊的其他九篇论文中提炼出一些经验教训,这些论文回顾了从这一不断发展的文献中取得的进展。我们提供了批判性的综合,确定了仍未解决的问题,并认识到了未来的挑战。一个跨学科的观察结果是,人类、动物和机器的能力尚未达到极限。因此,这个根植于认知科学的跨学科研究领域,挖掘出了令人兴奋的新问题和研究领域,同时促进了传统上不相关的学科之间富有成效的合作,开辟了科学领域的新天地。