Literature DB >> 8006091

Sensitivity of children's inflection to grammatical structure.

J J Kim1, G F Marcus, S Pinker, M Hollander, M Coppola.   

Abstract

What is the input to the mental system that computes inflected forms like walked, came, dogs, and men? Recent connectionist models feed a word's phonological features into a single network, allowing it to generalize both regular and irregular phonological patterns, like stop-stopped, step-stepped and fling-flung, cling-clung. But for adults, phonological input is insufficient: verbs derived from nouns like ring the city always have regular past tense forms (ringed), even if they are phonologically identical to irregular verbs (ring the bell). Similarly, nouns based on names, like two Mickey Mouses, and compounds based on possessing rather than being their root morpheme, such as two sabertooths, take regular plurals, even when they are homophonous with irregular nouns like mice and teeth. In four experiments, testing 70 three- to ten-year-old children, we found that children are sensitive to such nonphonological information: they were more likely to produce regular inflected forms for forms like to ring ('to put a ring on') and snaggletooth (a kind of animal doll with big teeth) than for their homophonous irregular counterparts, even when these counterparts were also extended in meaning. Children's inflectional systems thus seem to be like adults': irregular forms are tied to the lexicon but regular forms are computed by a default rule, and words are represented as morphological tree structures reflecting their derivation from basic word roots. Such structures, which determine how novel complex words are derived and interpreted, also govern whether words with irregular sound patterns will be regularized: a word can be irregular only if its structure contains an irregular root in 'head' position, allowing the lexically stored irregular information to percolate up to apply to the word as a whole. In all other cases, the inflected form is compouted by a default regular rule. This proposal fits the facts better than alternatives appealing to ambiguity reduction or semantic similarity to a word's central sense. The results, together with an analysis of adult speech to children, suggest that morphological structure and a distinction between mechanisms for regular and irregular inflection may be inherent to the design of children's language systems.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 8006091     DOI: 10.1017/s0305000900008710

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Child Lang        ISSN: 0305-0009


  9 in total

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2.  Lexical Semantics and Irregular Inflection.

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3.  Residual language deficits in optimal outcome children with a history of autism.

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4.  The role of meaning in past-tense inflection: evidence from polysemy and denominal derivation.

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5.  Rules versus statistics: insights from a highly inflected language.

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6.  On the role of variables in phonology: Remarks on Hayes and Wilson (2008).

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7.  Past tense marking by African American English-speaking children reared in poverty.

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9.  The nature of regularity and irregularity: evidence from Hebrew nominal inflection.

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  9 in total

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