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The Greedy and Recursive Search for Morphological Productivity

  • Caleb Belth
  • , Sarah Payne
  • , Deniz Beser
  • , Jordan Kodner
  • , Charles Yang
  • University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
  • University of Pennsylvania
  • University of Southern California

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

12 Scopus citations

Abstract

As children acquire the knowledge of their language’s morphology, they invariably discover the productive processes that can generalize to new words. Morphological learning is made challenging by the fact that even fully productive rules have exceptions, as in the well-known case of English past tense verbs, which features the -ed rule against the irregular verbs. The Tolerance Principle is a recent proposal that provides a precise threshold of exceptions that a productive rule can withstand. Its empirical application so far, however, requires the researcher to fully specify rules defined over a set of words. We propose a greedy search model that automatically hypothesizes rules and evaluates their productivity over a vocabulary. When the search for broader productivity fails, the model recursively subdivides the vocabulary and continues the search for productivity over narrower rules. Trained on psychologically realistic data from child-directed input, our model displays developmental patterns observed in child morphology acquisition, including the notoriously complex case of German noun pluralization. It also produces responses to nonce words that, despite receiving only a fraction of the training data, are more similar to those of human subjects than current neural network models’ responses are.

Original languageEnglish
Pages2869-2875
Number of pages7
StatePublished - 2021
Event43rd Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society: Comparative Cognition: Animal Minds, CogSci 2021 - Virtual, Online, Austria
Duration: Jul 26 2021Jul 29 2021

Conference

Conference43rd Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society: Comparative Cognition: Animal Minds, CogSci 2021
Country/TerritoryAustria
CityVirtual, Online
Period07/26/2107/29/21

Keywords

  • computational modeling
  • language acquisition
  • linguistics
  • morphology

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