Grounding Systematic Syncretism in Learning

It is commonly assumed that patterns of syncretism in inflectional paradigms are restricted in some way. In this article, I show how such restrictions can reflect cognitive constraints on language learning. Namely, I construct a learning algorithm that is biased toward certain types of affix distributions in paradigms, thereby rendering them systematic. In developing this algorithm, I rely on the traditional notions of underspecification and blocking, but recast them in terms of learners' biases toward generalization strategies based on cross-situational intersections and default reasoning. This algorithm allows us to test claims about systematicity of syncretism using typological data and language acquisition studies. In the last part of the article, I present a crosslinguistic survey of verbal agreement paradigms that supports the algorithm's predictions.

[1]  Jeff Good Linguistic universals and language change , 2008 .

[2]  Aleksandar Baucal,et al.  Inflectional morphology and word meaning: Orthogonal or co-implicative cognitive domains? , 2003 .

[3]  E. Mark Gold,et al.  Language Identification in the Limit , 1967, Inf. Control..

[4]  Charles D. Yang,et al.  Knowledge and learning in natural language , 2000 .

[5]  Katya Pertsova Production, perception, and emergent phonotactic patterns: A case of contrastive palatalization (review) , 2007 .

[6]  Harold Key,et al.  Morphology of cayuvava , 1967 .

[7]  Katya Pertsova Learning form -meaning mappings in presence of homonymy: A linguistically motivated model of learning inflection , 2007 .

[8]  Steven Pinker,et al.  Words and rules , 1998 .

[9]  P. Smolensky,et al.  Optimality Theory: Constraint Interaction in Generative Grammar , 2004 .

[10]  Michael Cysouw,et al.  The paradigmatic structure of person marking , 2003 .

[11]  Simon Tuchais French , 1958, Language Communities in Japan.

[12]  J. D. Quesada A grammar of Teribe , 2000 .

[13]  Greville G. Corbett,et al.  Network Morphology: a DATR account of Russian nominal inflection , 1993, Journal of Linguistics.

[14]  Yuan Yao,et al.  Grounding as Learning , 2003 .

[15]  Alec Marantz,et al.  Some key features of distributed morphology , 1994 .

[16]  H. H. J. Coate,et al.  A grammar of Ngarinjin, Western Australia , 1970 .

[17]  Gregory Stump,et al.  On Rules of Referral , 1993 .

[18]  Laurel J. Watkins,et al.  A Grammar of Kiowa , 1984 .

[19]  S. Kirby The Evolution of Meaning-Space Structure through Iterated Learning , 2007 .

[20]  H. Harley,et al.  Person and Number in Pronouns: A Feature-Geometric Analysis , 2002 .

[21]  Morris Halle,et al.  Distributed morphology and the pieces of inflection , 1993 .

[22]  Adam Albright,et al.  Explaining universal tendencies and language particulars in analogical change , 2006 .

[23]  Gisela Zifonun,et al.  Explorations in nominal inflection , 2004 .

[24]  M. Halle Distributed Morphology: Impoverishment and Fission , 2000 .

[25]  E. Blom,et al.  Effects of age on the acquisition of agreement inflection , 2007 .

[26]  Gregory T. Stump A Non-Canonical Pattern of Deponency and Its Implications , 2007 .

[27]  A. Anttila Deriving Variation from Grammar , 1997 .

[28]  A. Kroch Morphosyntactic Variation , 1997 .

[29]  Juhan Tuldava,et al.  Estonian Textbook: Grammar - Exercises - Conversation , 2006 .

[30]  L. Gleitman The Structural Sources of Verb Meanings , 2020, Sentence First, Arguments Afterward.

[31]  J. Fodor,et al.  Concepts: Where Cognitive Science Went Wrong , 1998 .

[32]  Stephen R. Anderson,et al.  A-Morphous morphology , 1992 .

[33]  J. Siskind A computational study of cross-situational techniques for learning word-to-meaning mappings , 1996, Cognition.

[34]  G. Booij,et al.  Yearbook of Morphology , 1988 .

[35]  Matthew Baerman,et al.  The Syntax-Morphology Interface: A Study of Syncretism , 2009 .

[36]  A. Jongman,et al.  Processing of English inflectional morphology , 1997, Memory & cognition.

[37]  Sandra Chung,et al.  The Design of Agreement: Evidence from Chamorro , 1998 .

[38]  Angelo Cangelosi,et al.  Emergence of Communication and Language , 2006 .

[39]  A. Carnie,et al.  Papers on phonology and morphology , 1994 .

[40]  B. J. Hoff The Carib Language: Phonology, Morphonology, Morphology, Texts and Word Index , 1968 .

[41]  René Kager,et al.  Ternary rhythm in alignment theory , 1995 .

[42]  Nigel Vincent,et al.  The Romance Languages , 1988 .

[43]  M. R. Manzini Learnability and Cognition , 1991 .

[44]  Fredericka I. Martin,et al.  The Aleut language , 1944 .

[45]  R. Harald Baayen,et al.  Morphological structure in language processing , 2003 .

[46]  Guy W. Mineau,et al.  Complexity minimization in rule-based category learning: Revising the catalog of Boolean concepts and evidence for non-minimal rules , 2007 .

[47]  Colin Wilson,et al.  Learning Phonology With Substantive Bias: An Experimental and Computational Study of Velar Palatalization , 2006, Cogn. Sci..

[48]  L. Steels Perceptually grounded meaning creation , 1996 .

[49]  Jonathan Owens,et al.  A Grammar of Harar Oromo , 1985 .

[50]  Rama Kant Agnihotri,et al.  Hindi: An Essential Grammar , 2007 .

[51]  David Gil,et al.  The World Atlas of Language Structures , 2005 .

[52]  M. Baerman Typology and the formal modelling of syncretism , 2005 .

[53]  Syncretism in Verbal Person/Number Marking , 2005 .

[54]  E. Markman,et al.  When it is better to receive than to give: Syntactic and conceptual constraints on vocabulary growth , 1994 .

[55]  Grigoris Antoniou,et al.  Nonmonotonic reasoning , 1997 .

[56]  Matthew Baerman,et al.  Deponency and Morphological Mismatches , 2007 .

[57]  Dieter Wunderlich,et al.  How Gaps and substitutions can become optimal: the pronominal affix paradigms of Yimas , 2001 .

[58]  Robert Hetzron,et al.  Semitic Languages , 1954, PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America.

[59]  Semantic relationships of Gahuku verbs , 1976 .

[60]  Patrick M. Farrell,et al.  Impoverishment Theory and Morphosyntactic , 2004 .

[61]  Linda B. Smith,et al.  Rapid Word Learning Under Uncertainty via Cross-Situational Statistics , 2007, Psychological science.

[62]  Paul Forchheimer The category of person in language , 1953 .

[63]  Nivja H. de Jong,et al.  The morphological family size effect and morphology , 2000 .

[64]  M. Meyerhoff,et al.  Working papers in linguistics , 1994 .

[65]  Elizabeth Murane,et al.  Daga grammar : from morpheme to discourse , 1974 .

[66]  D. Wunderlich Is There Any Need for the Concept of Directional Syncretism , 2004 .

[67]  Paul Vogt,et al.  Perceptual Grounding in Robots , 1997, EWLR.

[68]  Roman Jakobson,et al.  Russian and Slavic grammar : studies, 1931-1981 , 1986 .

[69]  Steven G. Lapointe,et al.  Morphology and its relation to phonology and syntax Ed. by , 1998 .

[70]  F. Hinskens,et al.  Variation, change and phonological theory , 1997 .

[71]  M A Nowak,et al.  Evolution of universal grammar. , 2001, Science.

[72]  Bŭlgarska akademii︠a︡ na naukite,et al.  Bulgarian Academy of Sciences reference book 1969 , 1969 .

[73]  J. Locke Questions Concerning the Law of Nature , 1990 .

[74]  Partha Niyogi,et al.  Book Reviews: The Computational Nature of Language Learning and Evolution, by Partha Niyogi , 2007, CL.

[75]  E. Moreton Analytic bias and phonological typology* , 2008, Phonology.

[76]  S. Béjar,et al.  Marking markedness: The underlying order of diagonal syncretisms , 1999 .

[77]  Arnold M. Zwicky,et al.  How to Describe Inflection , 1985 .

[78]  Edwin Williams,et al.  Remarks on lexical knowledge , 1994 .

[79]  Simon Kirby,et al.  Function, Selection, and Innateness: The Emergence of Language Universals , 1999 .

[80]  S. Potter,et al.  Universals of Language , 1966 .

[81]  Bridget Samuels,et al.  On Evolutionary Phonology , 2007, Biolinguistics.

[82]  Geert Booij,et al.  Yearbook of Morphology 1999 , 2001 .

[83]  Desmond C. Derbyshire,et al.  Handbook of Amazonian Languages , 1986 .