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Evaluating learning-strategy components: Being fair (Commentary on Ambridge, Pine, and Lieven)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2026

Lisa Pearl*
Affiliation:
University of California, Irvine
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Abstract

I completely agree with Ambridge, Pine, and Lieven (AP&L) that anyone proposing a learning-strategy component needs to demonstrate precisely how that component helps solve the language acquisition task. To this end, I discuss how computational modeling is a tool well suited to doing exactly this, and that it has the added benefit of highlighting hidden assumptions underlying learning strategies. I also suggest general criteria relating to utility and usability that we can use to evaluate potential learning strategies. As a response to AP&L's request for Universal Grammar (UG) components that actually do work, I additionally provide a review of one potentially UG component that is part ofa successful learning strategy for syntactic islands, and that satisfies the evaluation criteria I propose.

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Perspectives
Copyright
Copyright © 2014 Linguistic Society of America

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References

Ambridge, Ben, Pine, Julian Μ.; and Lieven, Elena V. Μ.. 2014. Child language acquisition: Why universal grammar doesn't help. Language 90. 3.e53e90.10.1353/lan.2014.0051CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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