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  Learning hierarchical centre-embedding structures: Influence of distributional properties of the Input

Chen, Y., Ferrari, A., Hagoort, P., Bocanegra, B., & Poletiek, F. H. (2023). Learning hierarchical centre-embedding structures: Influence of distributional properties of the Input. Poster presented at the 19th NVP Winter Conference on Brain and Cognition, Egmond aan Zee, The Netherlands.

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 Creators:
Chen, Yao1, Author           
Ferrari, Ambra1, 2, Author           
Hagoort, Peter1, 2, Author           
Bocanegra, Bruno3, Author
Poletiek, Fenna H.1, 4, Author           
Affiliations:
1Neurobiology of Language Department, MPI for Psycholinguistics, Max Planck Society, ou_792551              
2Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, External Organizations, ou_55236              
3Erasmus University, Rotterdam, The Netherlands , ou_persistent22              
4Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands, ou_persistent22              

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 Abstract: Nearly all human languages have grammars with complex recursive structures. These structures pose notable learning challenges. Two distributional properties of the input may facilitate learning: the presence of semantic biases (e.g. p(barks|dog) > p(talks|dog)) and the Zipf-distribution, with short sentences being extremely more frequent than longer ones. This project tested the effect of these sources of information on statistical learning of a hierarchical center-embedding grammar, using an artificial grammar learning paradigm. Semantic biases were represented by variations in transitional probabilities between words, with a biased input (p(barks|dog) > p(talks|dog)) compared to a non-biased input (p(barks|dog) = p(talks|dog)). The Zipf distribution was compared to a flat distribution, with sentences of different lengths occurring equally often. In a 2×2 factorial design, we tested for effects of biased transitional probabilities (biased/non-biased) and the distribution of sequences with varying length (Zipf distribution/flat distribution) on implicit learning and explicit ratings of grammaticality. Preliminary results show that a Zipf-shaped and semantically biased input facilitates grammar learnability. Thus, this project contributes to understanding how we learn complex structures with long-distance dependencies: learning may be sensitive to the specific distributional properties of the linguistic input, mirroring meaningful aspects of the world and favoring short utterances.

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Language(s): eng - English
 Dates: 2023-12-14
 Publication Status: Not specified
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Title: the 19th NVP Winter Conference on Brain and Cognition
Place of Event: Egmond aan Zee, The Netherlands
Start-/End Date: 2023-12-14 - 2023-12-16

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