Smalltalk scaffolding: A case study of minimalist instruction
Mary Beth Rosson, John M. Carroll, et al.
CHI 1990
The English "good and" intensifier is discussed as an example of a form that is acceptable even though ungrammatical, both synchronically and diachronically. The construction is analyzed as a case of creative analogy: the extension of a grammatically generated form to a new function, one for which it has no direct grammatical justification. From the perspective of a "dynamic" theory of language acquisition and evolution, it is argued that such forms constitute a new sort of evidence regarding the nature of language universals. © 1980 Plenum Publishing Corporation.
Mary Beth Rosson, John M. Carroll, et al.
CHI 1990
Scott P. Robertson, John M. Carroll, et al.
ACM SIGPLAN Notices
Alistair Sutcliffe, John M. Carroll, et al.
CHI 1994
Amy Aaronson, John M. Carroll
Behaviour and Information Technology