Literature DB >> 30405323

The effect of Zipfian frequency variations on category formation in adult artificial language learning.

Kathryn D Schuler1, Patricia A Reeder2, Elissa L Newport1, Richard N Aslin3.   

Abstract

Successful language acquisition hinges on organizing individual words into grammatical categories and learning the relationships between them, but the method by which children accomplish this task has been debated in the literature. One proposal is that learners use the shared distributional contexts in which words appear as a cue to their underlying category structure. Indeed, recent research using artificial languages has demonstrated that learners can acquire grammatical categories from this type of distributional information. However, artificial languages are typically composed of a small number of equally frequent words, while words in natural languages vary widely in frequency, complicating the distributional information needed to determine categorization. In a series of three experiments we demonstrate that distributional learning is preserved in an artificial language composed of words that vary in frequency as they do in natural language, along a Zipfian distribution. Rather than depending on the absolute frequency of words and their contexts, the conditional probabilities that words will occur in certain contexts (given their base frequency) is a better basis for assigning words to categories; and this appears to be the type of statistic that human learners utilize.

Entities:  

Keywords:  artificial grammar learning; grammatical categorization; language acquisition

Year:  2017        PMID: 30405323      PMCID: PMC6217973          DOI: 10.1080/15475441.2016.1263571

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lang Learn Dev        ISSN: 1547-3341


  22 in total

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Journal:  Psychol Sci       Date:  2002-09

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Journal:  J Child Lang       Date:  2004-02

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Authors:  Padraic Monaghan; Nick Chater; Morten H Christiansen
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2004-12-24

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Journal:  J Child Lang       Date:  1988-02

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Journal:  J Child Lang       Date:  1983-02

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Journal:  Cognition       Date:  1997-05

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Authors:  Aleka Akoyunoglou Blackwell
Journal:  J Child Lang       Date:  2005-08

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Authors:  Toben H Mintz
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2003-11

9.  Category induction from distributional cues in an artificial language.

Authors:  Toben H Mintz
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2002-07

10.  Give and take: syntactic priming during spoken language comprehension.

Authors:  Malathi Thothathiri; Jesse Snedeker
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2008-02-06
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  3 in total

1.  Children and Adults as Language Learners: Rules, Variation, and Maturational Change.

Authors:  Elissa L Newport
Journal:  Top Cogn Sci       Date:  2019-03-05

2.  Statistical language learning: computational, maturational, and linguistic constraints.

Authors:  Elissa L Newport
Journal:  Lang Cogn       Date:  2016-07-28

3.  How do infants start learning object names in a sea of clutter?

Authors:  Hadar Karmazyn Raz; Drew H Abney; David Crandall; Chen Yu; Linda B Smith
Journal:  Cogsci       Date:  2019-07
  3 in total

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