Disambiguatory Signals are Stronger in Word-initial Positions


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Date

2021-04

Publication Type

Conference Paper

ETH Bibliography

yes

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Data

Abstract

Psycholinguistic studies of human word processing and lexical access provide ample evidence of the preferred nature of word-initial versus word-final segments, e.g., in terms of attention paid by listeners (greater) or the likelihood of reduction by speakers (lower). This has led to the conjecture—as in Wedel et al. (2019b), but common elsewhere—that languages have evolved to provide more information earlier in words than later. Information-theoretic methods to establish such tendencies in lexicons have suffered from several methodological shortcomings that leave open the question of whether this high word-initial informativeness is actually a property of the lexicon or simply an artefact of the incremental nature of recognition. In this paper, we point out the confounds in existing methods for comparing the informativeness of segments early in the word versus later in the word, and present several new measures that avoid these confounds. When controlling for these confounds, we still find evidence across hundreds of languages that indeed there is a cross-linguistic tendency to front-load information in words.

Publication status

published

Book title

Proceedings of the 16th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Main Volume

Journal / series

Volume

Pages / Article No.

31 - 41

Publisher

Association for Computational Linguistics

Event

16th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics (EACL 2021)

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

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Organisational unit

09682 - Cotterell, Ryan / Cotterell, Ryan check_circle

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