Over the last decades, a growing body of evidence on the mechanismsgoverning lexical storage, access, acquisition and processing has questionedtraditional models of language architecture and word usage based on the hypothesisof a direct correspondence between modular components of grammarcompetence (lexicon vs. rules), processing correlates (memory vs. computation)and neuro-anatomical localizations (prefrontal vs. temporo-parietal perisylvianareas of the left hemisphere). In the present chapter, we explore the empiricaland theoretical consequences of a distributed, integrative model of the mentallexicon, whereby words are seen as emergent properties of the functional interactionbetween basic, language-independent processing principles and the language-specific nature and organization of the input. From this perspective,language learning appears to be inextricably related to the way language isprocessed and internalized by the speakers, and key to an interdisciplinary understandingof such a way, in line with Tomaso Poggio's suggestion that the developmentof a cognitive skill is causally and ontogenetically prior to itsexecution (and sits "on top of it"). In particular, we discuss conditions, potentialand prospects of the epistemological continuity between psycholinguistic andcomputational modelling of word learning, and illustrate the yet largely untappedpotential of their integration. We use David Marr's hierarchy to clarify the complementarityof the two viewpoints. Psycholinguistic models are informative abouthow speakers learn to use language (interfacing Marr's levels 1 and 2). When wemove from the psycholinguistic analysis of the functional operations involved inlanguage learning to an algorithmic description of how they are computed, computersimulations can help us explore the relation between speakers' behavior andgeneral learning principles in more detail. In the end, psycho-computational models can be instrumental to bridge Marr's levels 2 and 3, bringing us closer tounderstanding the nature of word knowledge in the brain.

Psycho-computational modelling of the mental lexicon

Pirrelli Vito
Primo
;
Marzi Claudia
Secondo
;
Ferro Marcello;Cardillo Franco Alberto;
2020

Abstract

Over the last decades, a growing body of evidence on the mechanismsgoverning lexical storage, access, acquisition and processing has questionedtraditional models of language architecture and word usage based on the hypothesisof a direct correspondence between modular components of grammarcompetence (lexicon vs. rules), processing correlates (memory vs. computation)and neuro-anatomical localizations (prefrontal vs. temporo-parietal perisylvianareas of the left hemisphere). In the present chapter, we explore the empiricaland theoretical consequences of a distributed, integrative model of the mentallexicon, whereby words are seen as emergent properties of the functional interactionbetween basic, language-independent processing principles and the language-specific nature and organization of the input. From this perspective,language learning appears to be inextricably related to the way language isprocessed and internalized by the speakers, and key to an interdisciplinary understandingof such a way, in line with Tomaso Poggio's suggestion that the developmentof a cognitive skill is causally and ontogenetically prior to itsexecution (and sits "on top of it"). In particular, we discuss conditions, potentialand prospects of the epistemological continuity between psycholinguistic andcomputational modelling of word learning, and illustrate the yet largely untappedpotential of their integration. We use David Marr's hierarchy to clarify the complementarityof the two viewpoints. Psycholinguistic models are informative abouthow speakers learn to use language (interfacing Marr's levels 1 and 2). When wemove from the psycholinguistic analysis of the functional operations involved inlanguage learning to an algorithmic description of how they are computed, computersimulations can help us explore the relation between speakers' behavior andgeneral learning principles in more detail. In the end, psycho-computational models can be instrumental to bridge Marr's levels 2 and 3, bringing us closer tounderstanding the nature of word knowledge in the brain.
Campo DC Valore Lingua
dc.authority.anceserie TRENDS IN LINGUISTICS. STUDIES AND MONOGRAPHS en
dc.authority.orgunit Istituto di linguistica computazionale "Antonio Zampolli" - ILC en
dc.authority.people Pirrelli Vito en
dc.authority.people Marzi Claudia en
dc.authority.people Ferro Marcello en
dc.authority.people Cardillo Franco Alberto en
dc.authority.people Baayen Harald R en
dc.authority.people Milin Petar en
dc.collection.id.s 8c50ea44-be95-498f-946e-7bb5bd666b7c *
dc.collection.name 02.01 Contributo in volume (Capitolo o Saggio) *
dc.contributor.appartenenza Istituto di linguistica computazionale "Antonio Zampolli" - ILC *
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dc.contributor.area Non assegn *
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dc.contributor.area Non assegn *
dc.date.accessioned 2024/02/21 04:51:59 -
dc.date.available 2024/02/21 04:51:59 -
dc.date.firstsubmission 2024/09/26 16:23:36 *
dc.date.issued 2020 -
dc.date.submission 2025/02/06 14:00:50 *
dc.description.abstracteng Over the last decades, a growing body of evidence on the mechanismsgoverning lexical storage, access, acquisition and processing has questionedtraditional models of language architecture and word usage based on the hypothesisof a direct correspondence between modular components of grammarcompetence (lexicon vs. rules), processing correlates (memory vs. computation)and neuro-anatomical localizations (prefrontal vs. temporo-parietal perisylvianareas of the left hemisphere). In the present chapter, we explore the empiricaland theoretical consequences of a distributed, integrative model of the mentallexicon, whereby words are seen as emergent properties of the functional interactionbetween basic, language-independent processing principles and the language-specific nature and organization of the input. From this perspective,language learning appears to be inextricably related to the way language isprocessed and internalized by the speakers, and key to an interdisciplinary understandingof such a way, in line with Tomaso Poggio's suggestion that the developmentof a cognitive skill is causally and ontogenetically prior to itsexecution (and sits "on top of it"). In particular, we discuss conditions, potentialand prospects of the epistemological continuity between psycholinguistic andcomputational modelling of word learning, and illustrate the yet largely untappedpotential of their integration. We use David Marr's hierarchy to clarify the complementarityof the two viewpoints. Psycholinguistic models are informative abouthow speakers learn to use language (interfacing Marr's levels 1 and 2). When wemove from the psycholinguistic analysis of the functional operations involved inlanguage learning to an algorithmic description of how they are computed, computersimulations can help us explore the relation between speakers' behavior andgeneral learning principles in more detail. In the end, psycho-computational models can be instrumental to bridge Marr's levels 2 and 3, bringing us closer tounderstanding the nature of word knowledge in the brain. -
dc.description.affiliations Institute for Computational Linguistics, Italian National Research Council. Eberhard Karls University, Tubingen, Germany. University of Birmingham, UK. -
dc.description.allpeople Pirrelli, Vito; Marzi, Claudia; Ferro, Marcello; Cardillo, FRANCO ALBERTO; Baayen Harald, R; Milin, Petar -
dc.description.allpeopleoriginal Pirrelli, Vito; Marzi, Claudia; Ferro, Marcello; Cardillo, Franco Alberto; Baayen, Harald R.; Milin, Petar en
dc.description.fulltext open en
dc.description.international si en
dc.description.numberofauthors 6 -
dc.identifier.doi 10.1515/9783110440577-002 en
dc.identifier.isbn 9783110440577 en
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/408278 -
dc.identifier.url https://www.degruyter.com/view/book/9783110440577/10.1515/9783110440577-002.xml en
dc.language.iso eng en
dc.miur.last.status.update 2025-03-20T08:59:21Z *
dc.publisher.country DEU en
dc.publisher.name De Gruyter Saur en
dc.publisher.place Berlin/Munich en
dc.relation.allauthors Pirrelli Vito; Marzi Claudia; Ferro Marcello; Cardillo Franco Alberto; Baayen Harald R.; Milin Petar en
dc.relation.alleditors Vito Pirrelli, Ingo Plag and Wolfgang U. Dressler en
dc.relation.firstpage 23 en
dc.relation.ispartofbook Word Knowledge and Word Usage en
dc.relation.lastpage 82 en
dc.relation.medium ELETTRONICO en
dc.relation.numberofpages 60 en
dc.subject.keywordseng mental lexicon -
dc.subject.keywordseng word storage and processing -
dc.subject.keywordseng psycholinguistics -
dc.subject.keywordseng computational linguistics -
dc.subject.keywordseng connectionist models -
dc.subject.keywordseng discriminative learning -
dc.subject.singlekeyword mental lexicon *
dc.subject.singlekeyword word storage and processing *
dc.subject.singlekeyword psycholinguistics *
dc.subject.singlekeyword computational linguistics *
dc.subject.singlekeyword connectionist models *
dc.subject.singlekeyword discriminative learning *
dc.title Psycho-computational modelling of the mental lexicon en
dc.type.circulation Internazionale en
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dc.type.referee Esperti anonimi en
dc.ugov.descaux1 421741 -
iris.isi.extIssued 2020 -
iris.isi.extTitle Psycho-computational modelling of the mental lexicon A discriminative learning perspective -
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