For more than 50 years, language scientists have assumed
that sentence structure is fundamentally hierarchical, made up of small
parts in turn made of smaller parts, like Russian nesting dolls.
A new Cornell study suggests language use is simpler than they had thought.
Co-author Morten Christiansen, Cornell professor of psychology and
co-director of the Cornell Cognitive Science Program, and his colleagues
say that language is actually based on simpler sequential structures,
like clusters of beads on a string.
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