Charles Yang (linguist)

Charles Yang (born 1973) is a linguist and cognitive scientist. He is currently Professor in the Department of Linguistics, Computer Science, and Psychology at the University of Pennsylvania.[1] His research focuses on language acquisition, variation and change, and is carried out from a broadly Chomskyan perspective.

For the musician of the same name, see Charles Yang.
Charles Yang
Awards
Academic background
Education
ThesisKnowledge and Learning in Natural Language (2000)
Academic advisors
Academic work
Institutions

Yang is a graduate of MIT's AI Lab. His first book, Knowledge and Learning in Natural Language (2002), proposes a model of syntactic acquisition couched within the Principles and Parameters framework. In this model, different grammatical options are associated with different probabilities, which change over time. The model is applied to a number of case studies in language acquisition and historical linguistics. His second book, The Infinite Gift: how children learn and unlearn the languages of the world (2006), is written for a popular audience and explores acquisition and knowledge of language. Yang's third book, The Price of Productivity: how children learn to break the rules of language (2016), won the Linguistic Society of America's Leonard Bloomfield Award.[2] This book deals with the acquisition of linguistic rules with exceptions, and proposes a quantifiable upper bound on the number of lexical exceptions that a grammatical rule can tolerate.

In 2018, Yang was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship.[3]

References

Books

  • Yang, Charles. 2002. Knowledge and Learning in Natural Language. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Yang, Charles. 2006. The Infinite Gift: how children learn and unlearn the languages of the world. New York: Scribner's.
  • Yang, Charles. 2016. The Price of Productivity: how children learn to break the rules of language. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.