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Another look at indirect negative evidence

Abstract

Indirect negative evidence is clearly an important way for learners to constrain overgeneralisation, and yet a good learning theoretic analysis has yet to be provided for this, whether in a PAC or a probabilistic identification in the limit framework. In this paper we suggest a theoretical analysis of indirect negative evidence that allows the presence of ungrammatical strings in the input and also accounts for the relationship between grammaticality/acceptability and probability. Given independently justified assumptions about lower bounds on the probabilities of grammatical strings, we establish that a limited number of membership queries of some strings can be probabilistically simulated

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On the alleged impossibility of inductive probability.Ellery Eells -1988 -British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 39 (1):111-116.

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Alexander Clark
University of Wisconsin, Madison

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