Does morphological complexity affect word segmentation? Evidence from computational modeling

被引:1
|
作者
Loukatou, Georgia [1 ]
Stoll, Sabine [2 ]
Blasi, Damian [2 ,3 ]
Cristia, Alejandrina [1 ]
机构
[1] PSL Univ, CNRS, EHESS, LSCP,Departement Etud Cognit,ENS, F-75005 Paris, France
[2] Univ Zurich, Dept Comparat Language Sci, Language Dev Lab, CH-8032 Zurich, Switzerland
[3] Univ Zurich, ISLE, Ctr Interdisciplinary Study Language Evolut, CH-8032 Zurich, Switzerland
关键词
Cross-linguistic variation; Computational modeling; Statistical learning; Word segmentation; Language acquisition; Morphology; Artificial language; PHONOTACTIC CUES; SPEECH; FRENCH; ACQUISITION; MOMMY;
D O I
10.1016/j.cognition.2021.104960
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
How can infants detect where words or morphemes start and end in the continuous stream of speech? Previous computational studies have investigated this question mainly for English, where morpheme and word boundaries are often isomorphic. Yet in many languages, words are often multimorphemic, such that word and morpheme boundaries do not align. Our study employed corpora of two languages that differ in the complexity of inflectional morphology, Chintang (Sino-Tibetan) and Japanese (in Experiment 1), as well as corpora of artificial languages ranging in morphological complexity, as measured by the ratio and distribution of morphemes per word (in Experiments 2 and 3). We used two baselines and three conceptually diverse word segmentation algorithms, two of which rely purely on sublexical information using distributional cues, and one that builds a lexicon. The algorithms' performance was evaluated on both word- and morpheme-level representations of the corpora. Segmentation results were better for the morphologically simpler languages than for the morphologically more complex languages, in line with the hypothesis that languages with greater inflectional complexity could be more difficult to segment into words. We further show that the effect of morphological complexity is relatively small, compared to that of algorithm and evaluation level. We therefore recommend that infant researchers look for signatures of the different segmentation algorithms and strategies, before looking for differences in infant segmentation landmarks across languages varying in complexity.
引用
收藏
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Does geopolitical risk affect exports? Evidence from China
    Liu, Ke
    Fu, Qiang
    Ma, Qing
    Ren, Xiang
    [J]. ECONOMIC ANALYSIS AND POLICY, 2024, 81 : 1558 - 1569
  • [42] Does Gender Affect Mortgage Choice? Evidence from the US
    Do, Chau
    Paley, Irina
    [J]. FEMINIST ECONOMICS, 2013, 19 (02) : 33 - 68
  • [43] Does male education affect fertility? Evidence from Mali
    Godefroy, Raphael
    Lewis, Joshua
    [J]. ECONOMICS LETTERS, 2018, 172 : 118 - 122
  • [44] The effects of spaces on word segmentation in Chinese reading: Evidence from eye movements
    Liu, Pingping
    Lu, Qin
    [J]. JOURNAL OF RESEARCH IN READING, 2018, 41 (02) : 329 - 349
  • [45] Morphological representation in specific language impairment: Evidence from Greek word formation
    Dalalakis, JE
    [J]. FOLIA PHONIATRICA ET LOGOPAEDICA, 1999, 51 (1-2) : 20 - 35
  • [46] MORPHOLOGICAL STRUCTURE IN VISUAL WORD RECOGNITION - EVIDENCE FROM PREFIXED AND SUFFIXED WORDS
    BEAUVILLAIN, C
    [J]. LANGUAGE AND COGNITIVE PROCESSES, 1994, 9 (03): : 317 - 339
  • [47] How does task switching affect arithmetic strategy use in children with low mathematics achievement? Evidence from computational estimation
    Li, Hongxia
    Hua, Xiaoteng
    Yang, Yalin
    Huang, Bijuan
    Si, Jiwei
    [J]. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY OF EDUCATION, 2020, 35 (01) : 225 - 240
  • [48] How does task switching affect arithmetic strategy use in children with low mathematics achievement? Evidence from computational estimation
    Hongxia Li
    Xiaoteng Hua
    Yalin Yang
    Bijuan Huang
    Jiwei Si
    [J]. European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2020, 35 : 225 - 240
  • [49] FATE OF MORPHOLOGICAL COMPLEXITY IN LANGUAGE DEATH - EVIDENCE FROM EAST SUTHERLAND GAELIC
    DORIAN, NC
    [J]. LANGUAGE, 1978, 54 (03) : 590 - 609
  • [50] How Animacy and Natural Gender Constrain Morphological Complexity: Evidence from Diachrony
    Igartua, Ivan
    Santazilia, Ekaitz
    [J]. OPEN LINGUISTICS, 2018, 4 (01): : 438 - 452