Title: Linguistics and the Scientific Method
1Linguistics and the Scientific Method
- David Eddington
- Brigham Young University
2How many sociolinguists does it take to change a
lightbulb?
3How many sociolinguists does it take to change a
lightbulb?
4How many theoretical linguists does it take to
change a lightbulb?
5How many theoretical linguists does it take to
change a lightbulb?
6How many theoretical linguists does it take to
change a lightbulb?
- LGAD Lightbulb Changing Acquisition Device
7How many theoretical linguists does it take to
change a lightbulb?
- LGAD Lightbulb Changing Acquisition Device
- Parameter Clockwise in or counterclockwise in
8How many theoretical linguists does it take to
change a lightbulb?
- LGAD Lightbulb Changing Acquisition Device
- Parameter Clockwise in or counterclockwise in
- Constraints counterclockwise
-
9How many theoretical linguists does it take to
change a lightbulb?
- LGAD Lightbulb Changing Acquisition Device
- Parameter Clockwise in or counterclockwise in
- Constraints counterclockwise (count)?
-
10How many theoretical linguists does it take to
change a lightbulb?
- LGAD Lightbulb Changing Acquisition Device
- Parameter Clockwise in or counterclockwise in
- Constraints counterclockwise (count)?
- clockwise
11How many theoretical linguists does it take to
change a lightbulb?
- LGAD Lightbulb Changing Acquisition Device
- Parameter Clockwise in or counterclockwise in
- Constraints counterclockwise (count)?
- clockwise (clock)
-
12How many theoretical linguists does it take to
change a lightbulb?
- LGAD Lightbulb Changing Acquisition Device
- Parameter Clockwise in or counterclockwise in
- Constraints counterclockwise (count)?
- clockwise (clock)
-
- Constrain Rankings clock gtgt count
- count gtgt clock
13How many theoretical linguists does it take to
change a lightbulb?
14Introduction
- Empirical or scientific studies follow the
scientific method. - Observe a phenomenon.
- Formulate a hypothesis to explain it.
- Carry out an experiment or collect other
observations to test the hypothesis. - Analyze the results to determine whether they
confirm or refute the hypothesis.
15Introduction
- Empirical or scientific studies follow the
scientific method. - Observe a phenomenon.
- Formulate a hypothesis to explain it.
- Carry out an experiment or collect other
observations to test the hypothesis. - Analyze the results to determine whether they
confirm or refute the hypothesis. - Non-scientific studies don't follow the
scientific method nor make scientific claims.
16Introduction
- Pseudo-science makes scientific sounding claims
without following the scientific method.
17Introduction
- Pseudo-science makes scientific sounding claims
without following the scientific method.
18Introduction
- Pseudo-sciencies often display these
characteristics - They ignore contradictory evidence.
- Their proponents often react in a hostile manner
when their orthodoxy is challenged. - They use an inordinate amount of technical
jargon. - The correctness of their ideas is supported by
argumentation, reasoning, intuition,
introspection, and reference to authority figures
rather than tangible evidence. - Very little new real-world knowledge is
produced. - It is impossible to subject their theories to
scrutiny. - Explanations are vague and often involve
scientific terms used out of context.
19Step 1 Observation
20Step 2 Hypothesis Formation
- Form a hypothesis by speculating about an
explanation for the phenomenon. - A The hypothesis must predict something.
-
21Step 2 Hypothesis Formation
- Form a hypothesis by speculating about an
explanation for the phenomenon. - A The hypothesis must predict something.
- B The hypothesis must be potentially
falsifiable.
22Step 2 Hypothesis Formation
- Form a hypothesis by speculating about an
explanation for the phenomenon. - A The hypothesis must predict something.
- B The hypothesis must be potentially
falsifiable. - Examples of unfalsifiable hypotheses
- 1 Bloodletting and yellow fever
23Step 2 Hypothesis Formation
- Form a hypothesis by speculating about an
explanation for the phenomenon. - A The hypothesis must predict something.
- B The hypothesis must be potentially
falsifiable. - Examples of unfalsifiable hypotheses
- 1 Bloodletting and yellow fever
- 2 Flapping rule in American English (Kahn
1976)? - Flaps occur after -cons segments city,
sorted vs. aptitude - Flaps vary after 'l' (faculty, altar) so 'l'
is either cons or -cons
24Step 2 Hypothesis Formation
- Form a hypothesis by speculating about an
explanation for the phenomenon. - A The hypothesis must predict something.
- B The hypothesis must be potentially
falsifiable. - Examples of unfalsifiable hypotheses
- 1 Bloodletting and yellow fever
- 2 Flapping rule in American English (Kahn
1976)? - Flaps occur after -consonantal segments
city, sorted vs. aptitude - Flaps vary after l (faculty, altar) so l
is either cons or -cons - 3 Dutch stress (Oostendorp 1997)?
- HEAD-R Primary stress falls on the right
edge of a word. - NON-FIN Primary stress may not fall on the
final syllable of a word. - NON-FIN gtgt HEAD-R predicts no final stress
- But, words such as chocola have final
stress? - In these cases, NON-FIN ltlt HEAD-R
25Step 2 Hypothesis Formation
- Form a hypothesis by speculating about an
explanation for the phenomenon. - A The hypothesis must predict something.
- B The hypothesis must be potentially
falsifiable. - Examples of linguistic hypotheses that ARE
falsifiable - 1 Reflexives and pronouns cannot have the
same referent (Chomsky 1981).? -
26Step 2 Hypothesis Formation
- Form a hypothesis by speculating about an
explanation for the phenomenon. - A The hypothesis must predict something.
- B The hypothesis must be potentially
falsifiable. - Examples of linguistic hypotheses that ARE
falsifiable - 1 Reflexives and pronouns cannot have the
same referent (Chomsky 1981). - 2 Word-final deletion of 't' and 'd' occurs
more in high frequency words (Bybee 2000). - just is pronounced jus' more than pest is
pronounced pes' -
27Step 2 Hypothesis Formation
- Form a hypothesis by speculating about an
explanation for the phenomenon. - A The hypothesis must predict something.
- B The hypothesis must be potentially
falsifiable. - C The hypothesis must deal with spatiotemporal
events. -
28Step 2 Hypothesis Formation
- Form a hypothesis by speculating about an
explanation for the phenomenon. - A The hypothesis must predict something.
- B The hypothesis must be potentially
falsifiable. - C The hypothesis must deal with spatiotemporal
events. - Non-spatiotemporal linguistic entities
- 1 Ideal speaker-hearer
- Ideal Actual
29Step 2 Hypothesis Formation
- Form a hypothesis by speculating about an
explanation for the phenomenon. - A The hypothesis must predict something.
- B The hypothesis must be potentially
falsifiable. - C The hypothesis must deal with spatiotemporal
events. - Non-spatiotemporal linguistic entities
- 1 Ideal speaker-hearer
- 2 Competence
-
30Step 2 Hypothesis Formation
- Form a hypothesis by speculating about an
explanation for the phenomenon. - A The hypothesis must predict something.
- B The hypothesis must be potentially
falsifiable. - C The hypothesis must deal with spatiotemporal
events. - Non-spatiotemporal linguistic entities
- 1 Ideal speaker-hearer
- 2 Competence
-
- Suppose we find some child who is quite adept at
basic arithmetic. One possible hypothesis about
the 'competence' thought to underlie this skill
might be to attribute the child, not with
something so mundane as a learned, laborious,
step-by-step procedure for carrying out simple
arithmetic operations, but rather with knowledge
of number theory. And what if experimental
results are found that seem to fly in the face of
this hypothesis? Just chalk them up as
'performance errors' and the well-formed theory
remains inviolate. (Derwing 1983)? -
31Step 2 Hypothesis Formation
- Form a hypothesis by speculating about an
explanation for the phenomenon. - A The hypothesis must predict something.
- B The hypothesis must be potentially
falsifiable. - C The hypothesis must deal with spatiotemporal
events. - Non-spatiotemporal entities in physics
- Strings
- 1 They are one dimensional objects.
- 2 Exist in space containing 10-24
dimensions. - 3 Appear as protons or electons, etc.
depending of frequency of vibration. -
-
32Step 2 Hypothesis Formation
- And it turns out that the best and the brightest
young theorists, instead of being concerned about
the experimental enterprise, are going off among
themselves and doing their thing with the doors
closed. Because no one else is interested in
coming, they're all making these secret signs to
one another and putting incomprehensible formulas
together that to them are, of course, central and
simple and predictive and whatnot but to us are a
little bit irrelevant. - They're answering a bunch of questions, but their
questions lie completely within string theory,
which has nothing to do with experiment. - What the string theorists do is arguably physics.
It deals with the physical world. They're
attempting to make a consistent theory that
explains the interactions we see among particles
and gravity as well. That's certainly physics,
but it's a kind of physics that is not yet
testable. It does not make predictions that have
anything to do with experiments that can be done
in the laboratory or with observations that could
be made in space or from telescopes. - That is to say, there ain't no experiment that
could be done nor is there any observation that
could be made that would say, "You guys are
wrong." The theory is safe, permanently safe. I
ask you, is that a theory of physics or a
philosophy? (Glashow 2003)?
33Digression What is Linguistics About?
- 1 According to some, linguistics is not
empirical. - A Its goal is to find all and only
intuitively valid formulae. (Itkonen1976)? -
34Digression What is Linguistics About?
- 1 According to some, linguistics is not
empirical. - A Its goal is to find all and only intuitively
valid formulae. (Itkonen1976)? - B Linguistics deals with axioms about
linguistic structure which make it possible to
deduce all true statements about the system from
a small set of prior assumptions about its
nature. (Kac 44)?
35Digression What is Linguistics About?
- 1 According to some linguistics is not empirical.
- A Its goal is to all and only intuitively
valid formulae. (Itkonen1976)? - B Linguistics deals with axioms about
linguistic structure which make it possible to
deduce all true statements about the system from
a small set of prior assumptions about its
nature. (Kac 44)? - C Grammars do not (and moreover, are not
intended to) dictate the ways in which the
computation of speaking and listening proceed.
(Bradley 1980)? -
36Digression What is Linguistics About?
- 2 According to others, linguistics deal with
real-world entities. - A Do speakers really retrieve morphemes from
their memory, invoke rules, go through all these
labours when speaking? We think they do.
(Bromberg and Halle 2000)?
37Digression What is Linguistics About?
- 2 According to others, linguistics deal with
real-world entities. - A Do speakers really retrieve morphemes from
their memory, invoke rules, go through all these
labours when speaking? We think they do
(Bromberg and Halle 2000). - B The categories and operations of generative
grammar are hypotheses about the representations
and computations in the minds and brains of
speakers. (Marantz 2005)?
38Digression What is Linguistics About?
- 2 Others espouse both empirical and non-empirical
views at the same time. - A Explaining the actual processing of
linguistic knowledge by the human mind is not
the goal of the formal theory of grammar . . . a
grammatical model should not be equated with its
computational implementation. (Kager 1999)?
39Digression What is Linguistics About?
- 2 Others espouse both empirical and non-empirical
views at the same time. - A Explaining the actual processing of
linguistic knowledge by the human mind is not
the goal of the formal theory of grammar . . . a
grammatical model should not be equated with its
computational implementation. (Kager 1999)? - Several pages later Kager discusses how his
theory relates to language acquisition.
40Digression What is Linguistics About?
- 2 Others espouse both empirical and non-empirical
views at the same time. - A Explaining the actual processing of
linguistic knowledge by the human mind is not
the goal of the formal theory of grammar . . . a
grammatical model should not be equated with its
computational implementation (Kager 1999). - Several pages later Kager discusses how OT
relates to language acquisition. - B Linguisitics is a branch of cognitive
psychology. (Chomsky 1972)? - Linguistic rules are psychologically real
(Chomsky 1980). -
41Digression What is Linguistics About?
- 2 Others espouse both empirical and non-empirical
views at the same time. - A Explaining the actual processing of
linguistic knowledge by the human mind is not
the goal of the formal theory of grammar . . . a
grammatical model should not be equated with its
computational implementation (Kager 1999). - Several pages later Kager discusses how OT
relates to language acquisition. - B Linguisitics is a branch of cognitive
psychology. (Chomsky 1972)? - Linguistic rules are psychologically real
(Chomsky 1980). -
- Although we may describe the grammar G as a
system of processes and rules that apply in a
certain order to relate sound and meaning, we are
not entitled to take this as a description of the
successive acts of a performance model. (Chomsky
1972)? -
42Digression What is Linguistics About?
- Is it any wonder people are confused about the
scientific status of linguistics?
43Digression What is Linguistics About?
- The problem consists of confusing empirical and
non-empirical approaches. - No one confuses psychological theories of how
people make inferences with the logical theories
of implication, or psychological theories of how
people perform arithmetical calculations with
mathematical theories of numbers. Yet, in the
exact parallel case of linguistics,
conceptualists do not make the distinction,
conflating a psychological theory of how people
speak and understand speech with a theory of the
language itself. (Katz 1985)?
44Digression What is Linguistics About?
- The problem consists of confusing empirical and
non-empirical approaches. - No one confuses psychological theories of how
people make inferences with the logical theories
of implication, or psychological theories of how
people perform arithmetical calculations with
mathematical theories of numbers. Yet, in the
exact parallel case of linguistics,
conceptualists do not make the distinction,
conflating a psychological theory of how people
speak and understand speech with a theory of the
language itself. (Katz 1985)? - Psycholinguistic evidence doesn't relate to the
most elegant, concise, intuitive analysis. - The most elegant, concise, intuitive analysis
isn't necessarily part of actual cognitive
processing.
45Digression What is Linguistics About?
- The problem consists of confusing empirical and
non-empirical approaches. - No one confuses psychological theories of how
people make inferences with the logical theories
of implication, or psychological theories of how
people perform arithmetical calculations with
mathematical theories of numbers. Yet, in the
exact parallel case of linguistics,
conceptualists do not make the distinction,
conflating a psychological theory of how people
speak and understand speech with a theory of the
language itself. (Katz 1985)? - Psycholinguistic evidence doesn't relate to most
elegant, concise, intuitive analysis. - Most elegant, concise, intuitive analysis isn't
necessarily used in actual cognitive processing. - An analysis is pseudoscientific when it makes
claims about the real world without following
scientific methodology.
46Digression What is Linguistics About?
- So, choose either an empirical or non-empirical
approach and then limit your conclusions to your
own domain. Don't make claims that belong to the
domain of the other approach!!
47Step 3 Experimentation
- Test hypothesis by further observation or
experimentation.
48Step 3 Experimentation
- Test hypothesis by further observation or
experimentation. - A hypothesis about a phenomenon is not evidence
for that phenomenon.
49Step 3 Experimentation
- Test hypothesis by further observation or
experimentation. - A hypothesis about a phenomenon is not evidence
for that phenomenon. - Examples of how hypothesis and evidence are
conflated - 1 Hypotheis Perform may not be followed by a
mass noun perform a trick, perform labor
(Chomsky 1962). -
50Step 3 Experimentation
- Test hypothesis by further observation or
experimentation. - A hypothesis about a phenomenon is not evidence
for that phenomenon. - Examples of how hypothesis and evidence are
conflated - 1 Hypotheis Perform may not be followed by a
mass noun perform a trick, perform labor
(Chomsky 1962). -
- Evidence I am a native speaker of English.
(Chomsky 1962)? - In other words, his hypothesis about perform
is it's own evidence.
51Step 3 Experimentation
- Test hypothesis by further observation or
experimentation. - A hypothesis about a phenomenon is not evidence
for that phenomenon. - Examples of how hypothesis and evidence are
conflated - 1 Hypotheis Perform may not be followed by a
mass noun perform a trick, perform labor
(Chomsky 1962). -
- Evidence I am a native speaker of English.
(Chomsky 1962)? - In other words, his hypothesis about perform
is it's own evidence. - 2 Hypothesis Spanish speakers have a
constraint against stress as in te.lé.fos.no
(antepenultimate with a closed penultimate,
Harris 1983).
52Step 3 Experimentation
- Test hypothesis by further observation or
experimentation. - A hypothesis about a phenomenon is not evidence
for that phenomenon. - Examples of how hypothesis and evidence are
conflated - 1 Hypotheis Perform may not be followed by a
mass noun perform a trick, perform labor
(Chomsky 1962). -
- Evidence I am a native speaker of English.
(Chomsky 1962)? - In other words, his hypothesis about perform
is it's own evidence. - 2 Hypothesis Spanish speakers have a
constraint against stress as in
te.lé.fos.no (antepenultimate with a closed
penultimate, Harris 1983). - Evidence No words of this sort in Spanish.
The observation in the lexicon is also the
evidence for psychological reality of the
observation.
53Step 3 Experimentation
- Test hypothesis by further observation or
experimentation. - A hypothesis about a phenomenon is not evidence
for that phenomenon. - Examples of how hypothesis and evidence are
conflated - 1 Hypotheis Perform may not be followed by a
mass noun perform a trick, perform labor
(Chomsky 1962). -
- Evidence I am a native speaker of English.
(Chomsky 1962)? - In other words, his hypothesis about perform
is it's own evidence. - 2 Hypothesis Spanish speakers have a
constraint against stress as in
te.lé.fos.no (antepenultimate with a closed
penultimate, Harris 1983). - Evidence No words of this sort in Spanish.
The observation in the lexicon is also the
evidence for the observation. - Alvord (2003) shows Spanish speakers don't
reject words like te.lé.fos.no.
54Step 3 Experimentation
- Data must be publically available. This allows
replication. - Examples of studies that are not publically
available - A Anything based on personal introspection.
-
55Step 3 Experimentation
- Data must be publically available. This allows
replication. - Examples of studies that are not publically
available - A Anything based on personal introspection.
- B Lozonov's Suggestopedia
56Step 4 Analyze the Data
- 1 Science uses statistics.
57Step 4 Analyze the Data
- 1 Science uses statistics.
- 2 Both confirmed and refuted hypotheses are
valuable. - A Cold fusion
58Step 4 Analyze the Data
- C Refuted hypotheses should be abandoned, or
modified and further tested.
59Step 4 Analyze the Data
- C Refuted hypotheses should be abandoned, or
modified and further tested. - D It is tempting to ignore counter evidence
- 1 In linguistics it is often deemed
uninteresting or peripherial to the core of
the theory (Schütze, 1996).
60Step 4 Analyze the Data
- C Refuted hypotheses should be abandoned, or
modified and further tested. - D It is tempting to ignore counter evidence
- 1 In linguistics it is often deemed
uninteresting or peripherial to the core of
the theory (Schütze 1996). - 2 The counter evidence violates more the
letter than the spirit of the projection
principle. (Burzio 1986). -
61Step 4 Analyze the Data
- C Refuted hypotheses should be abandoned, or
modified and further tested. - D It is tempting to ignore counter evidence.
- 1 In linguistics it is often deemed
uninteresting or peripherial to the core of
the theory (Schütze 1996). - 2 The counter evidence violates more the
letter than the spirit of the projection
principle. (Burzio 1986). - 3 Chosmky cited A-over-A principle years after
his own student refuted it (Haley and Lunsford
1994).
62Conclusions
- Why follow the scientific method in linguistics?
63Conclusions
- No nya nya. Both empirical and non-empirical are
worthy pursuits.
64Conclusions
- Why follow the scientific method in linguistics?
- A Because making empirical claims without
following scientific methodology is
pseudoscience.
65Conclusions
- Why follow the scientific method in linguistics?
- A Because empirical claims without following
scientific methodology is pseudoscience. - We don't want linguistics to be thought of as
66Conclusions
- Why follow the scientific method in linguistics?
- A Because empirical claims without following
scientific methodology is pseudoscience. - B Lack of progress and stagnation will occur.
- The explanations they Freudian psychologists
provided created only the illusion of
understanding. By attempting to explain
everything after the fact, they barred the door
to any advance. Progress occurs only when a
theory does not predict everything but instead
makes specific predictions that tell us --in
advance-- something specific about the world.
(Stanovich 1996)?
67Conclusions
- The scientific method isn't perfect, but it's the
best we have. - "The scientific method is the only reliable way
to seek out the truth of natural events. Yes,
experiments can fail spectacularly,
interpretation of experiments can be misguided,
and science can make mistakes. The nature of
science is self-correcting. No major fallacy can
long persist in the face of a progressive
increase in knowledge. (Collins 2006)?
68