Michael C. Frank
Michael C. Frank is a developmental psychologist at Stanford University who proposed that infants' language development may be thought of as a process of Bayesian inference. He has also studied the role of language in numerical cognition by comparing the performance of native Pirahã language speakers to that of MIT undergraduate students in numeric tasks. For this work, he traveled to Amazonas, Brazil with Daniel Everett, a linguist best known for his claim that Pirahã disproves a crucial component of Noam Chomsky's theory of universal grammar, recursion. Frank won the Cognitive Science Society's prestigious Marr Award for this work in 2008.
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Conducting Developmental Research Online vs. In-Person: A Meta-Analysis by Aaron Chuey, Veronica Boyce, Anjie Cao, Michael C. Frank
Published 2024-06-01Get full text
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Polite Speech Emerges From Competing Social Goals by Erica J. Yoon, Michael Henry Tessler, Noah D. Goodman, Michael C. Frank
Published 2023-10-01Get full text
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Evidence for Infant-directed Speech Preference Is Consistent Across Large-scale, Multi-site Replication and Meta-analysis by Martin Zettersten, Christopher Cox, Christina Bergmann, Angeline Sin Mei Tsui, Melanie Soderstrom, Julien Mayor, Rebecca A. Lundwall, Molly Lewis, Jessica E. Kosie, Natalia Kartushina, Riccardo Fusaroli, Michael C. Frank, Krista Byers-Heinlein, Alexis K. Black, Maya B. Mathur
Published 2024-04-01Get full text
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