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Letters to Nature
Nature 387, 592-594 (5 June 1997) | doi:10.1038/42456; Received 10 October 1996; Accepted 1 April 1997
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Dissociating types of mental computation
William D. Marslen-Wilson1 & Lorraine K. Tyler2
- Centre for Speech and Language, Birkbeck College, University of London, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HY, UK
- Both authors contributed equally to this work.
Abstract
A fundamental issue in the study of cognition and the brain is the nature of mental computation. How far does this depend on internally represented systems of rules, expressed as strings of symbols with a syntax, as opposed to more distributed neural systems, operating subsymbolically and without syntax? The mental representation of the regular and irregular past tense of the English verb has become a crucial test case for this debate. Single-mechanism approaches argue that current multilayer connectionist networks can account for the learning and representation both of regular and of irregular forms1, 2. Dual-mechanism approaches, although accepting connectionist accounts for the irregular forms, argue that a symbolic, rule-based system is required to explain the properties of the regular past tense and, by extension, the properties of language and cognition in general3, 4, 5. We show here that the regular and irregular past tense are supported by different neural systems, which can become dissociated by damage to the brain6, 7. This is evidence for functional and neurological distinctions in the types of mental computation that support these different aspects of linguistic and cognitive performance.
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