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A Life in CognitionThe Competition Model: Past and Future

A Life in Cognition: The Competition Model: Past and Future [In the 1980s, Elizabeth Bates, Csaba Pléh, Brian MacWhinney, and colleagues formulated a functionalist, usage-based approach to language processing and learning they called the Competition Model. The model viewed linguistic forms as competing during production for the expression of meanings and during comprehension for mapping forms onto meanings. It viewed the language learning as the acquisition of cues for resolving these competitions in real time and adjustments of the strengths of these cues based on their reliability and availability across the language. The model has been tested in over 100 studies of children, adults, second language learners, and people with aphasia in 18 different languages. The studies that Csaba Pléh conducted in this framework with Hungarian played a central role in the elaboration of the theory, because of the way they took advantage of the unique features of Hungarian to test basic claims of the theory. In the last two decades, the theory has been broadened to deal in greater detail with data on language fluency, age-related effects on language learning, and new data from neurolinguistics. This paper will summarize the basic findings from both the classic version of the Competition Model and the newer Unified Competition Model.] http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png

A Life in CognitionThe Competition Model: Past and Future

Part of the Language, Cognition, and Mind Book Series (volume 11)
Editors: Gervain, Judit; Csibra, Gergely; Kovács, Kristóf
A Life in Cognition — Dec 3, 2021

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References (22)

Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Copyright
© The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2022
ISBN
978-3-030-66174-8
Pages
3 –16
DOI
10.1007/978-3-030-66175-5_1
Publisher site
See Chapter on Publisher Site

Abstract

[In the 1980s, Elizabeth Bates, Csaba Pléh, Brian MacWhinney, and colleagues formulated a functionalist, usage-based approach to language processing and learning they called the Competition Model. The model viewed linguistic forms as competing during production for the expression of meanings and during comprehension for mapping forms onto meanings. It viewed the language learning as the acquisition of cues for resolving these competitions in real time and adjustments of the strengths of these cues based on their reliability and availability across the language. The model has been tested in over 100 studies of children, adults, second language learners, and people with aphasia in 18 different languages. The studies that Csaba Pléh conducted in this framework with Hungarian played a central role in the elaboration of the theory, because of the way they took advantage of the unique features of Hungarian to test basic claims of the theory. In the last two decades, the theory has been broadened to deal in greater detail with data on language fluency, age-related effects on language learning, and new data from neurolinguistics. This paper will summarize the basic findings from both the classic version of the Competition Model and the newer Unified Competition Model.]

Published: Dec 3, 2021

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