@conference{griffiths2002,
   title={{A probabilistic approach to semantic representation}},
   author={Griffiths, T. and Steyvers, M.},
   booktitle={Proceedings of the 24th annual conference of the cognitive science society},
   pages={381--386},
   year={2002}
}

@Mastersthesis{dekreek,
	author = {Mike de Kreek},
	title = {Language Acquisition and Virtual Grammars: On the Continuity of Cognition},
	school = {Universiteit van Amsterdam},
	year = {2003}
}


S. Kuczaj (Ed.) Language Development (Vol 1): Syntax and semantics. Hillsdale,
NJ Lawrence Erlbaum, 1982. pp. 73-136, Basic Syntactic Processes, Brian
MacWhinney, Carnegie-Mellon University
@article{macwhinney1982,
	editor = "S. Kuczaj",
	journal = "Language Development (Vol 1): Syntax and semantics.",
	volume= 1,
	address= "Hillsdale, NJ",
	publisher = "Lawrence Erlbaum", 
	year = 1982,
	pages = "73-136",
	title = "Basic Syntactic Processes",
	author = "Brian MacWhinney",
	institution = "Carnegie-Mellon University"
}

@article{janssen1996,
   title={{Compositionality}},
   author={Janssen, T.M.V.},
   journal={Handbook of Logic and Language},
   pages={417--473},
   year={1996},
   publisher={Elsevier} 
}

From Jay Pfaffman's personal bibliography:
@Book{vygotsky1962,
  author =      "L. S. Vygotsky",
  title =       "Thought and language",
  publisher =   "MIT Press",
  year =        "1962",
  address =     "Cambridge",
  review =      "According to wheatley1991cps -- original source for
                 Zone of proximal development",
}

@Book{austin1962,
  author =      "John Langshaw Austin",
  year =        "1962",
  title =       "How to Do Things with Words",
  publisher =   "Harvard University Press",
}

@INPROCEEDINGS{steels2000, 
	AUTHOR="Steels, Luc",
	BOOKTITLE="Architectures of the Mind, Architectures of the Brain",
	MONTH="September",
	TITLE="Mirror Neurons and the Action Theory of Language Origins",
	YEAR="2000",
	note  = {\url{http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/691178.html}},
	 URL = "http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/691178.html;
         http://www.csl.sony.fr/downloads/papers/2000/steels-amab2000.ps.gz"
}

http://scholar.google.nl/scholar.bib?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&q=info:BIR02BDzPAYJ:...
@article{rizzolatti1998,
  title={{Language within our grasp}},
  author={Rizzolatti, G. and Arbib, M.A.},
  journal={Trends in neurosciences},
  volume={21},
  number={5},
  pages={188--194},
  year={1998},
  publisher={Elsevier}
}

@InCollection{peirce1902,
  author =      "C. S. Peirce",
  editor =      "J. Buchler",
  year =        "1902",
  pages=	{98--119},
  title =       "Logic as semiotic: the theory of signs",
  booktitle =   "Philosophical Writings of Peirce",
  publisher =   "Dover",
  address =     "New York (NY)",
}

@InCollection{langacker1998,
	title={{Conceptualization, symbolization, and grammar}},
	author={Langacker, R.W.},
	editor="Michael Tomasello",
	booktitle={The new psychology of language: Cognitive and functional approaches to language structure},
	volume={4},   year={1998},
	publisher={New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Publishers}
}

Bloomfield, Leonard. 1914. Introduction to the Study of Language. New York: Henry Holt. Reprinted 1983, John Benjamins. Retrieved April 19, 2009. ISBN 90-272-1892-7.
@book{bloomfield1914,
	title={{An Introduction to the Study of Language}},
	author={Bloomfield, Leonard},
	year={1914},
	publisher={London: G. Bell and Sons/New York: Henry Holt.
Reprinted: Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 1983}
}


@book{ cook88chomskys,
    author = "Vivian J. Cook",
    title = "Chomsky's Universal Grammar: An Introduction",
    publisher = "Blackwell Publishers",
    address = "Oxford",
    year = "1988"
}

@book{ chomsky75reflections,
    author = "Noam Chomsky",
    title = "Reflections on Language",
    publisher = "Pantheon Books",
    address = "New York",
    year = "1975"
}

@InCollection{chomsky99handbook,
  author =       {Chomsky, Noam},
  editor =       {Ritchie, William C. AND Bhatia, Tej K.},
  booktitle =    {Handbook of Child Language Acquisition},
  title =        {On the Nature, Use and Acquisition of Language},
  publisher =    {Academic Press},
  year =         1999
}

@unpublished{cogprints2086,
           month = {September},
           title = {Simple principles for a complex output: An experiment in early syntactic development},
          author = {Christophe Parisse},
            year = {2001},
        keywords = {normal child syntax development},
             url = {http://cogprints.org/2086/},
        abstract = {A set of iterative mechanisms, the Three-Step Algorithm, is proposed to account for the burst in the syntactic capacities of children over age two. These mechanisms are based on the children?s perception, memory, elementary rule-like behavior and cognitive capacities, and do not require any specific innate grammatical capacities. The relevance of the Three-Step Algorithm is tested, using the large Manchester corpus in the CHILDES database. The results show that 80% of the utterances can be exactly reconstructed and that, when incomplete reconstructions are taken into account, 94% of all utterances are reconstructed. The Three-Step Algorithm should be followed by the progressive acquisition of syntactic categories and use of slot-and-frame structures which lead to a greater and more complex linguistic mastery.}
}

From Bibliography on computational linguistics, systemic and functional linguistics, artificial intelligence and general linguistics:
@Book{dreyfus1972,
  title =       "{W}hat {C}omputers can't do: {A} Critique of Artificial
                 Reason",
  publisher =   "{H}arper and {R}ow",
  year =        "1972",
  author =      "Hubert L. Dreyfus",
  topic =       "philosophy-AI;",
}


DOI resolverFrom Bibliography of Work in Philosophy of Language, Semantics, Artificial Intelligence, and Assorted Related Topics:
@Book{dreyfus1992,
  author =      "Hubert L. Dreyfus",
  title =       "What Computers Still Can't Do: {A} Critique of
                 Artificial Reason",
  publisher =   "The {MIT} Press",
  year =        "1992",
  address =     "Cambridge, Massachusetts",
  xref =        "Reviews: collins_hm:1996a, haugeland:1996a,
                 koschmann:1996a, mccarthy_j1:1996a, strom-darden:1996a.
                 Commentary: dreyfus_hl:1999a.",
  ISBN =        "0060906243",
  topic =       "philosophy-AI;",
}

From Bibliography of Work in Philosophy of Language, Semantics, Artificial Intelligence, and Assorted Related Topics:
@Article{fodor1980,
  author =      "Jerry A. Fodor",
  title =       "Methodological Solipsism Considered as a Research
                 Strategy in Cognitive Psychology",
  journal =     "The Behavioral and Brain Sciences",
  year =        "1980",
  volume =      "3",
  pages =       "63--73",
  missinginfo =  "number",
  xref =        "Republished: fodor_ja:1980a2.",
  topic =       "foundations-of-cognitive-science;philosophy-of-psychology;",
}

@Article{steyvers2005,
  title =       "The Large-Scale Structure of Semantic Networks:
                 Statistical Analyses and a Model of Semantic Growth",
  author =      "Mark Steyvers and Joshua B. Tenenbaum",
  journal =     "Cognitive Science",
  year =        "2005",
  number =      "1",
  volume =      "29",
  bibdate =     "2006-07-12",
  bibsource =   "DBLP,
                 http://dblp.uni-trier.de/db/journals/cogsci/cogsci29.html#SteyversT05",
  pages =       "41--78",
  url =         "\url{http://dx.doi.org/10.1207/s15516709cog2901_3}",
}

(18&nbsp;dupl. with&nbsp;Abstract and&nbsp;URL)HTMLFrom Bibliography on Computational and Algorithmic Learning Theory:
@InCollection{krifka1999,
  author =      "Krifka, Manfred",
  year =        "1999",
  title =       "Compositionality",
  booktitle =   "The {MIT} Encyclopedia of the Cognitive Sciences",
  publisher =   "{MIT} Press",
  editor =      "Robert A. Wilson and Frank Keil",
}


@book{Bod2002,
	address = {Chicago, IL},
	citeulike-article-id = {987398},
	editor = {Bod, R.  and Scha, R.  and Sima'an, K. },
	keywords = {bibtex-import},
	posted-at = {2006-12-10 08:47:33},
	priority = {2},
	publisher = {The University of Chicago Press},
	title = {Data-Oriented Parsing},
	year = {2002}
}

@techreport{Bod1996,
	author = {Bod, Rens   and Scha, Remko  },
	citeulike-article-id = {593065},
	institution = {University of Amsterdam},
	keywords = {bibtex-import},
	number = {LP-96-13},
	posted-at = {2006-04-20 23:51:23},
	priority = {0},
	title = {Data-Oriented Language Processing: An Overview},
	year = {1996}
}

 @comment{ Chang, Nancy & Gurevich, Olya (2004) ?Context-Driven 
           Construction Learning.? Proceedings of the 26th Annual 
           Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society. Chicago.  }
@inproceedings{chang2004,
	author = "Chang, Nancy and Gurevich, Olya",
	title = "Context-Driven Construction Learning",
	booktitle = "Proceedings of the 26th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society",
	address = "Chicago",
	year = 2004
}

@article{tom2000,
	abstract = {Recent research using both naturalistic and experimental methods has found that the vast majority of young children's early language is organized around concrete, item-based linguistic schemas. From this beginning, children then construct more abstract and adult-like linguistic constructions, but only gradually and in piecemeal fashion. These new data present significant problems for nativist accounts of children's language development that use adult-like linguistic categories, structures and formal grammars as analytical tools. Instead, the best account of these data is provided by a usage-based model in which children imitatively learn concrete linguistic expressions from the language they hear around them, and then - using their general cognitive and social-cognitive skills - categorize, schematize and creatively combine these individually learned expressions and structures.},
	address = {Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Inselstrasse 22, D-04103 Leipzig, Germany.},
	author = {Tomasello, Michael  },
	citeulike-article-id = {2847120},
	issn = {1364-6613},
	journal = {Trends in cognitive sciences},
	keywords = {development, islands, item-based, syntactic, verb},
	month = {April},
	number = {4},
	pages = {156--163},
	posted-at = {2008-12-13 19:28:49},
	priority = {2},
	title = {The item-based nature of children's early syntactic development.},
	url = {http://view.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10740280},
	volume = {4},
	year = {2000}
}

@book{tom2005,
        abstract = {{<p>  In this groundbreaking book, Michael Tomasello presents a comprehensive usage-based theory of language acquisition. Drawing together a vast body of empirical research in cognitive science, linguistics, and developmental psychology, Tomasello demonstrates that we don't need a self-contained "language instinct" to explain how children learn language. Their linguistic ability is interwoven with other cognitive abilities.  </p><p>  Tomasello argues that the essence of language is its symbolic dimension, which rests on the uniquely human ability to comprehend intention. Grammar emerges as the speakers of a language create linguistic constructions out of recurring sequences of symbols; children pick up these patterns in the buzz of words they hear around them.  </p><p>  All theories of language acquisition assume these fundamental skills of intention-reading and pattern-finding. Some formal linguistic theories posit a second set of acquisition processes to connect somehow with an innate universal grammar. But these extra processes, Tomasello argues, are completely unnecessary--important to save a theory but not to explain the phenomenon.  </p><p>  For all its empirical weaknesses, Chomskian generative grammar has ruled the linguistic world for forty years. <i>Constructing a Language</i> offers a compellingly argued, psychologically sound new vision for the study of language acquisition.   </p>}},
        author = {Tomasello, Michael  },
        citeulike-article-id = {543401},
        howpublished = {Paperback},
        isbn = {674017641},
        keywords = {cognition, language-acquisition},
        month = {March},
        posted-at = {2006-03-13 08:39:07},
        priority = {4},
        publisher = {{Harvard University Press}},
        title = {Constructing a Language : A Usage-Based Theory of Language Acquisition},
        url = {http://www.amazon.ca/exec/obidos/redirect?tag=citeulike09-20\&amp;path=ASIN/0674017641},
        year = {2005}
}

@conference{vankampen2003,
  title={{The learnability of syntactic categories}},
  author={van Kampen, Jacqueline},
  booktitle={Proceedings of GALA},
  pages={245--256},
  year={2003}
}

 @comment{ van Kampen, Jacqueline & Scha, Remko (2007): ?Modelling the 
           Steps of Early Syntax Acquisition,? Proceedings of the 
           Workshop Exemplar- Based Models of Language, Dublin.
Kampen, J. van and R. Scha (2007) 'Modeling the steps of early syntax acquisition', in: D. Cochran and R. Bod Proceedings of 'Exemplar-based Models of Language',  ESSLLI, Dublin, August 13-17 2007.  PDF }
@inproceedings{vankampen2007,
 author = "van Kampen, Jacqueline and Scha, Remko",
 title = "Modelling the Steps of Early Syntax Acquisition",
 booktitle = "Proceedings of the Workshop Exemplar-Based Models of Language",
 editor = "D. Cochran and R. Bod",
 address = "Dublin",
 month = {August},
 year = 2007
}

From Bibliography of Work in Philosophy of Language, Semantics, Artificial Intelligence, and Assorted Related Topics:
@Book{lakoff1999,
  author =      "George Lakoff and Mark Johnson",
  title =       "Philosophy In The Flesh: The Embodied Mind and Its
                 Challenge to {W}estern Thought",
  publisher =   "Basic Books",
  year =        "1999",
  address =     "New York",
  ISBN =        "0465056733",
  xref =        "Review: sowa:1999a.",
  topic =       "embodiment;metaphor;pragmatics;",
}

@InProceedings{steels2004,
  title =       "Constructivist Development of Grounded Construction
                 Grammar",
  author =      "Luc Steels",
  year =        "2004",
  bibdate =     "2005-01-14",
  bibsource =   "DBLP,
                 http://dblp.uni-trier.de/db/conf/acl/acl2004.html#Steels04",
  booktitle = "{Proceedings} of the 42nd {Annual} {Meeting} of the {ACL}",
  pages =       "9--16",
  URL =         "http://acl.ldc.upenn.edu/acl2004/main/pdf/159_pdf_2-col.pdf",
}

 @comment{ Odolphi, Ernst (2008): ?Formal Grammars for Early Child 
           Language,? BSc. thesis, Artificial Intelligence, University 
           of Amsterdam.  }

@misc{odolphi2008,
	author = "Odolphi, Ernst",
	title = "Formal Grammars for Early Child Language",
	note = "Bachelor's thesis, University of Amsterdam",
	year = {2008}
}

@misc{turnhout2007,
	author = "Jasper van Turnhout",
	title = "Learning in dialog: a Semantic Grammar Approach",
	note = "Bachelor's thesis, University of Amsterdam",
	year = {2007}
}

@misc{vancra2007,
	author = {van Cranenburgh, Andreas and Arjan Nusselder and Nadya Peek and Carsten van Weelden},
	year = {2007},
	title = {Towards a Computational Model for Early Language Acquisition},
	note = {2nd year Bachelor of AI project, University of Amsterdam},
	note = {https://unstable.nl/andreas/ai/2p/laac/verslag.pdf}
}

@Article{rosch1976,
  annote =      "rosch-etal76",
  pages =       "382--439",
  volume =      "8",
  year =        "1976",
  title =       "Basic objects in natural categories",
  key =         "Rosch, Mervis, Gray, Johnson and Boyes-Braem",
  journal =     "Cognitive Psychology",
  author =      "E. Rosch and C. B. Mervis and W. Gray and D. Johnson
                 and P. Boyes-Braem",
}

From Bibliography on computational linguistics, systemic and functional linguistics, artificial intelligence and general linguistics:
@Book{rorty1979,
  title =       "{P}hilosophy and the {M}irror of {N}ature",
  publisher =   "{P}rinceton {U}niversity {P}ress",
  year =        "1979",
  author =      "Richard Rorty",
  address =     "Princeton",
}

From AI and Cognitive Science Bibliography:
@Book{witt1953,
  note =        "G. Anscombe, translator",
  year =        "1953",
  title =       "Philosophical Investigations",
  address =     "New York",
  publisher =   "Macmillan",
  author =      "Ludwig Wittgenstein",
}

From Bibliography of Work in Philosophy of Language, Semantics, Artificial Intelligence, and Assorted Related Topics:
@Book{fodor1975,
  author =      "Jerry A. Fodor",
  title =       "The Language of Thought",
  publisher =   "Thomas A. Crowell Co.",
  year =        "1975",
  address =     "New York",
  topic =       "philosophy-of-mind;mental-representations;mental-language;
                 language-of-thought;",
}

@Book{jack1983,
  author =      "R. Jackendoff",
  title =       "Semantics and Cognition",
  publisher =   "MIT Press",
  year =        "1983",
  address =     "Cambridge/MA",
  topics =      "Linguistik / Raumbeschreibung / Philosophie /
                 Wissensrepr{\"a}sentation / Psychologie",
}

@article{turing1950,
	author = {Turing, A. M. },
	citeulike-article-id = {675373},
	journal = {Mind},
	keywords = {intelligence},
	month = {October},
	number = {236},
	pages = {433--460},
	posted-at = {2009-06-01 03:13:16},
	priority = {2},
	title = {Computing Machinery and Intelligence},
	note = {\url{http://www.jstor.org/stable/2251299}},
	volume = {59},
	year = {1950}
}

@misc{childes,
	author = {MacWhinney, Brian and Snow, Catherine},
	title = {The {CHILDES} Project: Tools for Analyzing Talk},
	note = {\url{http://childes.psy.cmu.edu}},
	publisher = "Lawrence Erlbaum Associates",
	address = "Hillsdale, NJ",
	year = {1995}
}

