Modelling complex inflection systems, such as conjugation in Modern Greek, Italian or Russian, requires careful consideration of a number of factors, ranging from pervasive stem allomorphy to the identification of the appropriate inflection class and the inferential predictability of morpho-phonological processes. Descriptive approaches have taken different views on how to account for degrees of morphological (ir)regularity, while making different predictions about the way speakers process regular and irregular forms in highly-inflecting languages. In the present paper, we assess the psycholinguistic implications of two radically different approaches to the description of the Russian verb system: a more traditional approach dating back to Jakobson (1948), and a Words and Paradigm approach (Brown 1998). Based on recent fMRI evidence (Slioussar et al. 2014) and original results of a neural network simulation with recurrent self-organising maps (Ferro et al. 2011; Marzi et al. 2014; Pirrelli et al. 2015; Marzi et al. 2016), we suggest that both approaches are prima facie compatiblewith Russian data, while being in contrast with Pinker's claim that the regular-irregular distinction is an epiphenomenon of the storage-processing dichotomy in the human languagefaculty (Pinker & Ullman 2002). We argue that this evidence lends support to integrativemodels of the mental lexicon (Marzi & Pirrelli 2015), accounting for a graded interactionbetween regularity and morphological structure.

Modelling the interaction of regularity and morphological structure: the case of Russian verb inflection

Marzi Claudia
Ultimo
2019

Abstract

Modelling complex inflection systems, such as conjugation in Modern Greek, Italian or Russian, requires careful consideration of a number of factors, ranging from pervasive stem allomorphy to the identification of the appropriate inflection class and the inferential predictability of morpho-phonological processes. Descriptive approaches have taken different views on how to account for degrees of morphological (ir)regularity, while making different predictions about the way speakers process regular and irregular forms in highly-inflecting languages. In the present paper, we assess the psycholinguistic implications of two radically different approaches to the description of the Russian verb system: a more traditional approach dating back to Jakobson (1948), and a Words and Paradigm approach (Brown 1998). Based on recent fMRI evidence (Slioussar et al. 2014) and original results of a neural network simulation with recurrent self-organising maps (Ferro et al. 2011; Marzi et al. 2014; Pirrelli et al. 2015; Marzi et al. 2016), we suggest that both approaches are prima facie compatiblewith Russian data, while being in contrast with Pinker's claim that the regular-irregular distinction is an epiphenomenon of the storage-processing dichotomy in the human languagefaculty (Pinker & Ullman 2002). We argue that this evidence lends support to integrativemodels of the mental lexicon (Marzi & Pirrelli 2015), accounting for a graded interactionbetween regularity and morphological structure.
2019
Istituto di linguistica computazionale "Antonio Zampolli" - ILC
Inglese
Berthold Crysmann; Florence Villoing
International Symposium of Morphology
International Symposium of Morphology (ISMo) 2019
2019
107
110
4
http://drehu.linguist.univ-paris-diderot.fr/ismo-2019/?fichier=programme
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
25-27/09/2019
Université de Paris, France
Inflectional complexity
Russian verb system
perception of morphological structure
recurrent self-organising neural network
2
none
Rorberi, Selena; Marzi, Claudia
273
info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
04 Contributo in convegno::04.01 Contributo in Atti di convegno
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/386352
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