Perception of typicality in the lexicon: wordlikeness, lexical density and morphonotactic constraints
Perception of typicality in the lexicon: wordlikeness, lexical density and morphonotactic constraints
Author(s): Claudia Marzi, Marzello Ferro, Emmanuel KeuleersSubject(s): Phonetics / Phonology, Morphology, Lexis, Language acquisition, Computational linguistics
Published by: Hrvatsko filološko društvo
Keywords: lexical acquisition; word processing; frequency; mental lexicon;
Summary/Abstract: The extent to which a symbolic time–series (a sequence of sounds or letters) is a typicalword of a language, referred to as WORDLIKENESS, has been shown to have effects in speech perception and production, reading proficiency, lexical development and lexical access, short–term and long–term verbal memory. Two quantitative models have been suggested to account for these effects: serial phonotactic probabilities (the likelihood for a given symbolic sequence to appear in the lexicon) and lexical density (the extent to which other words can be obtained from a target word by changing, deleting or inserting one or more symbols in the target). The two measures are highly correlated and thus easy to be confounded in measuring their effects in lexical tasks. In this paper, we propose a computational model of lexical organisation, based on Self–Organising Maps with Hebbian connections defined over a temporal layer (TSOMs), providing a principled algorithmic account of effects oflexical acquisition, processing and access, to further investigate these issues. In particular, we show that (morpho–)phonotactic probabilities and lexical density, though correlated in lexical organisation, can be taken to focus on different aspects of speakers’ word processing behaviour and thus provide independent cognitive contributions to our understanding of the principles of perception of typicality that govern lexical organisation.
Journal: Suvremena lingvistika
- Issue Year: 40/2014
- Issue No: 78
- Page Range: 171-191
- Page Count: 21
- Language: English