Tim Hunter


2025

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Kallini et al. (2024) Do Not Compare Impossible Languages with Constituency-based Ones
Tim Hunter
Computational Linguistics, Volume 51, Issue 2 - June 2025

A central goal of linguistic theory is to find a precise characterization of the notion “possible human language”, in the form of a computational device that is capable of describing all and only the languages that can be acquired by a typically developing human child. The success of recent large language models (LLMs) in NLP applications arguably raises the possibility that LLMs might be computational devices that meet this goal. This would only be the case if, in addition to succeeding in learning human languages, LLMs struggle to learn “impossible” human languages. Kallini et al. (2024) conducted experiments aiming to test this by training GPT-2 on a variety of synthetic languages, and found that it learns some more successfully than others. They present these asymmetries as support for the idea that LLMs’ inductive biases align with what is regarded as “possible” for human languages, but the most significant comparison has a confound that makes this conclusion unwarranted.

2023

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Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics 2023
Tim Hunter | Brandon Prickett
Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics 2023

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Noise-tolerant learning as selection among deterministic grammatical hypotheses
Laurel Perkins | Tim Hunter
Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics 2023

2022

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Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics 2022
Allyson Ettinger | Tim Hunter | Brandon Prickett
Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics 2022

2021

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Comparing methods of tree-construction across mildly context-sensitive formalisms
Tim Hunter | Robert Frank
Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics 2021

2019

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The Active-Filler Strategy in a Move-Eager Left-Corner Minimalist Grammar Parser
Tim Hunter | Miloš Stanojević | Edward Stabler
Proceedings of the Workshop on Cognitive Modeling and Computational Linguistics

Recent psycholinguistic evidence suggests that human parsing of moved elements is ‘active’, and perhaps even ‘hyper-active’: it seems that a leftward-moved object is related to a verbal position rapidly, perhaps even before the transitivity information associated with the verb is available to the listener. This paper presents a formal, sound and complete parser for Minimalist Grammars whose search space contains branching points that we can identify as the locus of the decision to perform this kind of active gap-finding. This brings formal models of parsing into closer contact with recent psycholinguistic theorizing than was previously possible.

2013

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Distributions on Minimalist Grammar Derivations
Tim Hunter | Chris Dyer
Proceedings of the 13th Meeting on the Mathematics of Language (MoL 13)

2010

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Unifying Adjunct Islands and Freezing Effects in Minimalist Grammars
Tim Hunter
Proceedings of the 10th International Workshop on Tree Adjoining Grammar and Related Frameworks (TAG+10)