Neither one is surprising to me at all. In fact I don’t think there is a sharp divide between syntax and style—syntax is that word which we assign to culturally shared style. That’s why we can define specialized syntaxes for dialectal differences. And as a structural rule, syntax/style is very relevant to word choice since it prohibits certain combinations. A big enough network will have a large enough working memory to “keep in mind” enough contextual information to effectively satisfy the syntax rules describing the styles it learned.
Neither one is surprising to me at all. In fact I don’t think there is a sharp divide between syntax and style—syntax is that word which we assign to culturally shared style. That’s why we can define specialized syntaxes for dialectal differences. And as a structural rule, syntax/style is very relevant to word choice since it prohibits certain combinations. A big enough network will have a large enough working memory to “keep in mind” enough contextual information to effectively satisfy the syntax rules describing the styles it learned.