Over the past decades, psycholinguistic aspects of word processing have made a considerable impact on views of language theory and language architecture. In the quest for the principles governing the ways human speakers perceive, store, access, and produce words, inflection issues have provided a challenging realm of scientific inquiry, and a battlefield for radically opposing views. It is somewhat ironic that some of the most influential cognitive models of inflection have long been based on evidence from an inflectionally impoverished language like English, where the notions of inflectional regularity, (de)composability, predictability, phonological complexity, and default productivity appear to be mutually implied. An analysis of more "complex" inflection systems such as those of Romance languages shows that this mutual implication is not a universal property of inflection, but a contingency of poorly contrastive, nearly isolating inflection systems. Far from presenting minor faults in a solid, theoretical edifice, Romance evidence appears to call into question the subdivision of labor between rules and exceptions, the on-line processing vs. long-term memory dichotomy, and the distinction between morphological processes and lexical representations. A dynamic, learning-based view of inflection is more compatible with this data, whereby morphological structure is an emergent property of the ways inflected forms are processed and stored, grounded in universal principles of lexical self-organization and their neuro-functional correlates.

Psycholinguistic Research on Inflectional Morphology in the Romance Languages

Marzi C
Primo
;
Pirrelli V
Ultimo
2022

Abstract

Over the past decades, psycholinguistic aspects of word processing have made a considerable impact on views of language theory and language architecture. In the quest for the principles governing the ways human speakers perceive, store, access, and produce words, inflection issues have provided a challenging realm of scientific inquiry, and a battlefield for radically opposing views. It is somewhat ironic that some of the most influential cognitive models of inflection have long been based on evidence from an inflectionally impoverished language like English, where the notions of inflectional regularity, (de)composability, predictability, phonological complexity, and default productivity appear to be mutually implied. An analysis of more "complex" inflection systems such as those of Romance languages shows that this mutual implication is not a universal property of inflection, but a contingency of poorly contrastive, nearly isolating inflection systems. Far from presenting minor faults in a solid, theoretical edifice, Romance evidence appears to call into question the subdivision of labor between rules and exceptions, the on-line processing vs. long-term memory dichotomy, and the distinction between morphological processes and lexical representations. A dynamic, learning-based view of inflection is more compatible with this data, whereby morphological structure is an emergent property of the ways inflected forms are processed and stored, grounded in universal principles of lexical self-organization and their neuro-functional correlates.
Campo DC Valore Lingua
dc.authority.orgunit Istituto di linguistica computazionale "Antonio Zampolli" - ILC en
dc.authority.people Marzi C en
dc.authority.people Pirrelli V en
dc.collection.id.s 4ee41c16-675a-4f7f-b092-4e496f29a60c *
dc.collection.name 02.04 Voce in repertorio (Bibliografia, Dizionario, Enciclopedia, Glossario, Thesaurus, altro) *
dc.contributor.appartenenza Istituto di linguistica computazionale "Antonio Zampolli" - ILC *
dc.contributor.appartenenza.mi 918 *
dc.contributor.area Non assegn *
dc.contributor.area Non assegn *
dc.date.accessioned 2024/02/19 19:37:34 -
dc.date.available 2024/02/19 19:37:34 -
dc.date.firstsubmission 2024/09/26 16:28:16 *
dc.date.issued 2022 -
dc.date.submission 2024/09/26 16:28:16 *
dc.description.abstracteng Over the past decades, psycholinguistic aspects of word processing have made a considerable impact on views of language theory and language architecture. In the quest for the principles governing the ways human speakers perceive, store, access, and produce words, inflection issues have provided a challenging realm of scientific inquiry, and a battlefield for radically opposing views. It is somewhat ironic that some of the most influential cognitive models of inflection have long been based on evidence from an inflectionally impoverished language like English, where the notions of inflectional regularity, (de)composability, predictability, phonological complexity, and default productivity appear to be mutually implied. An analysis of more "complex" inflection systems such as those of Romance languages shows that this mutual implication is not a universal property of inflection, but a contingency of poorly contrastive, nearly isolating inflection systems. Far from presenting minor faults in a solid, theoretical edifice, Romance evidence appears to call into question the subdivision of labor between rules and exceptions, the on-line processing vs. long-term memory dichotomy, and the distinction between morphological processes and lexical representations. A dynamic, learning-based view of inflection is more compatible with this data, whereby morphological structure is an emergent property of the ways inflected forms are processed and stored, grounded in universal principles of lexical self-organization and their neuro-functional correlates. -
dc.description.affiliations Institute for Computational Linguistics - National Research Council of Italy -
dc.description.allpeople Marzi, C; Pirrelli, V -
dc.description.allpeopleoriginal Marzi C., Pirrelli V. en
dc.description.fulltext restricted en
dc.description.note Published on 28 February 2022 en
dc.description.numberofauthors 2 -
dc.identifier.doi 10.1093/acrefore/9780199384655.013.709 en
dc.identifier.isbn 9780199384655 en
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/448878 -
dc.identifier.url https://oxfordre.com/linguistics/view/10.1093/acrefore/9780199384655.001.0001/acrefore-9780199384655-e-709 en
dc.language.iso eng en
dc.miur.last.status.update 2025-02-06T07:55:32Z *
dc.publisher.country GBR en
dc.publisher.name Oxford University Press en
dc.publisher.place Oxford en
dc.relation.allauthors Marzi Claudia, Vito Pirrelli en
dc.relation.alleditors Loporcaro, Michele en
dc.relation.firstpage 1 en
dc.relation.ispartofbook Oxford Encyclopedia of Romance Linguistics en
dc.relation.lastpage 44 en
dc.relation.medium ELETTRONICO en
dc.relation.numberofpages 44 en
dc.subject.keywordseng Romance language morphology -
dc.subject.keywordseng paradigms -
dc.subject.keywordseng inflectional classes -
dc.subject.keywordseng lexical self-organisation -
dc.subject.keywordseng frequency effects -
dc.subject.keywordseng priming -
dc.subject.keywordseng discriminative learning -
dc.subject.keywordseng lexical blocking -
dc.subject.keywordseng long-term and short-term memory -
dc.subject.singlekeyword Romance language morphology *
dc.subject.singlekeyword paradigms *
dc.subject.singlekeyword inflectional classes *
dc.subject.singlekeyword lexical self-organisation *
dc.subject.singlekeyword frequency effects *
dc.subject.singlekeyword priming *
dc.subject.singlekeyword discriminative learning *
dc.subject.singlekeyword lexical blocking *
dc.subject.singlekeyword long-term and short-term memory *
dc.title Psycholinguistic Research on Inflectional Morphology in the Romance Languages en
dc.type.circulation Internazionale en
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dc.type.miur 271 -
dc.type.referee Esperti anonimi en
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