最优分类

A. Grandison, Michael Franjieh, Lily Greene, G. Corbett
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引用次数: 0

摘要

关于语言是否影响认知的争论由来已久,但在肤色和亲属类别等领域产生了相互矛盾的发现。很少有研究调查不同语言的名义分类(性别、分类器)等系统,以检验语言分类对认知的影响。有效的分类需要信息丰富,以最大限度地提高沟通效率,但也要简单,以尽量减少认知负荷。因此,似乎有理由认为,不同的名义分类系统对说话者概念化相关实体的方式有影响。设计了一套七个实验来验证这一点;这里我们将重点放在卡片排序实验上,它包含两个子任务——自由排序和结构化排序。参与者是来自瓦努阿图和新喀里多尼亚的六种大洋语言的119名成年人,分类器清单从2到23个不等。卡片分类实验的结果表明,分类器似乎为任务中明确和突出的认知提供了结构。自由排序任务并没有通过分类器激发分类,因为它需要主观判断,而不是明确的指令。从我们的定量和定性分析中可以明显看出这一点。此外,与较为温和的分类系统相比,采用更极端分类系统的语言表现出更小的变化。因此,信息更丰富或更严格的系统似乎更有效。该研究表明,语言对认知的影响可能因语言而异,并不是所有的名义分类系统都采用简单性和信息量之间的最佳权衡。这些新数据为名义分类的起源和性质提供了新的视角。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Optimal categorisation
The debate as to whether language influences cognition has been long standing but has yielded conflicting findings across domains such as colour and kinship categories. Fewer studies have investigated systems such as nominal classification (gender, classifiers) across different languages to examine the effects of linguistic categorisation on cognition. Effective categorisation needs to be informative to maximise communicative efficiency but also simple to minimise cognitive load. It therefore seems plausible to suggest that different systems of nominal classification have implications for the way speakers conceptualise relevant entities. A suite of seven experiments was designed to test this; here we focus on our card sorting experiment, which contains two sub-tasks — a free sort and a structured sort. Participants were 119 adults across six Oceanic languages from Vanuatu and New Caledonia, with classifier inventories ranging from two to 23. The results of the card sorting experiment reveal that classifiers appear to provide structure for cognition in tasks where they are explicit and salient. The free sort task did not incite categorisation through classifiers, arguably as it required subjective judgement, rather than explicit instruction. This was evident from our quantitative and qualitative analyses. Furthermore, the languages employing more extreme categorisation systems displayed smaller variation in comparison to more moderate systems. Thus, systems that are more informative or more rigid appear to be more efficient. The study implies that the influence of language on cognition may vary across languages, and that not all nominal classification systems employ this optimal trade-off between simplicity and informativeness. These novel data provide a new perspective on the origin and nature of nominal classification.
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