Sentence first, arguments after: Mechanisms of morphosyntax acquisition

H. Getz
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Natural languages contain complex grammatical patterns. For example, in German, finite verbs occur second in main clauses while non-finite verbs occur last, as in 'dein Bruder möchte in den Zoo gehen' (“Your brother wants to go to the zoo”). Children easily acquire this type of morphosyntactic contingency (Poeppel & Wexler, 1993; Deprez & Pierce, 1994). There is extensive debate in the literature over the nature of children’s linguistic representations, but there are considerably fewer mechanistic ideas about how knowledge is actually acquired. Regarding German, one approach might be to learn the position of prosodically prominent open-class words (“verbs go 2nd or last”) and then fill in the morphological details. Alternatively, one could work in the opposite direction, learning the position of closed-class morphemes (“-te goes 2nd and -en goes last”) and fitting open-class items into the resulting structure. This second approach is counter-intuitive, but I will argue that it is the one learners take.Previous research suggests that learners focus distributional analysis on closed-class items because of their distinctive perceptual properties (Braine, 1963; Morgan, Meier, & Newport, 1987; Shi, Werker & Morgan, 1999; Valian & Coulson, 1988). The Anchoring Hypothesis (Valian & Coulson, 1988) posits that, because these items tend to occur at grammatically important points in the sentence (e.g., phrase edges), focusing on them helps learners acquire grammatical structure. Here I ask how learners use closed-class items to acquire complex morphosyntactic patterns such as the verb form/position contingency in German. Experiments 1-4 refute concerns that morphosyntactic contingencies like those in German are too complex to learn distributionally. Experiments 5-8 explore the mechanisms underlying learning, showing that adults and children analyze closed-class items as predictive of the presence and position of open-class items, but not the reverse. In these experiments, subtle mathematical distinctions in learners’ input had significant effects on learning, illuminating the biased computations underlying anchored distributional analysis. Taken together, results suggest that learners organize knowledge of language patterns relative to a small set of closed-class items—just as patterns are represented in modern syntactic theory (Rizzi & Cinque, 2016).
先句后论点:形态语法习得机制
自然语言包含复杂的语法模式。例如,在德语中,有限动词在主句中出现在第二,而非有限动词出现在最后,如'dein Bruder möchte in den Zoo gehen'(“你哥哥想去动物园”)。儿童很容易获得这种形态句法偶合(Poeppel & weexler, 1993;Deprez & Pierce, 1994)。关于儿童语言表征的本质,文献中存在广泛的争论,但关于知识实际上是如何获得的机械观点却少得多。对于德语,一种方法可能是学习韵律上突出的开放类单词的位置(“动词放在第二或最后”),然后填写形态学细节。或者,一个人可以从相反的方向工作,学习封闭类语素的位置(“-te排在第二位,-en排在最后”),并将开放类项目放入结果结构中。第二种方法是反直觉的,但我认为这是学习者所采用的方法。先前的研究表明,学习者关注封闭式项目的分布分析,是因为它们具有独特的感知特性(brain, 1963;Morgan, Meier, & Newport, 1987;Shi, Werker & Morgan, 1999;Valian & Coulson, 1988)。锚定假说(Valian & Coulson, 1988)认为,由于这些项目往往出现在句子中的语法重要点(如短语边缘),因此关注它们有助于学习者获得语法结构。在这里,我问学习者如何使用封闭类项目来获得复杂的形态句法模式,如德语中的动词形式/位置偶然性。实验1-4驳斥了人们的担忧,即形态句法的偶然性(如德语中的偶然性)过于复杂,无法通过分布学习。实验5-8探索了潜在的学习机制,表明成人和儿童分析封闭类项目作为开放类项目的存在和位置的预测,而不是相反。在这些实验中,学习者输入的微妙数学差异对学习有显著影响,阐明了锚定分布分析背后的偏差计算。综上所述,结果表明学习者组织语言模式知识相对于一小组封闭类项目-就像模式在现代句法理论中表示的那样(Rizzi & Cinque, 2016)。
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