2018
DOI: 10.1002/wcs.1467
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Cognitive and linguistic biases in morphology learning

Abstract: Morphology is the study of the relationship between form and meaning. The study of morphology involves understanding the rules and processes that underlie word formation, including the use and productivity of affixes, and the systems that create novel word forms. The present review explores these processes by examining the cognitive components that contribute to typological regularities among morphological systems across the world's language. The review will focus on research in morpheme segmentation, the suff… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(17 citation statements)
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References 128 publications
(191 reference statements)
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“…And so on. From studies of children ( Brown, 1973 ; Braine et al, 1990 ; Ambridge et al, 2015 ; Finley, 2018 ) and of adults (e.g., Seidenberg and Plaut, 2014 ; Pollatsek et al, 2015 ), there is good reason to suspect that distributional factors affect L1 and L2 morpheme acquisition and processing.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…And so on. From studies of children ( Brown, 1973 ; Braine et al, 1990 ; Ambridge et al, 2015 ; Finley, 2018 ) and of adults (e.g., Seidenberg and Plaut, 2014 ; Pollatsek et al, 2015 ), there is good reason to suspect that distributional factors affect L1 and L2 morpheme acquisition and processing.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…I focus on verbs here for consistency across studies and because they show more interesting inflectional patterns in English than other syntactic categories do. That said, the Zipfian statistical corpus distributions of verb lemmas, inflectional categories, and so on, are the same as those obeyed by other categories (Chan 2008;Finley 2018), which is demonstrated in practice by learning behavior in computational morphology learners (e.g., Lignos et al 2010). The results can therefore be extended to other syntactic categories.…”
Section: Verbal Lexicons Derived From Child-directed Speech and Adultmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…Availability has been widely demonstrated to impact processing, acquisition, and use in both L1 (e.g., Ambridge, Kidd, Rowland, & Theakston, 2015) and L2 (e.g., N. C. Ellis, 2002; N. C. Ellis, Römer, & O'Donnell, 2016). In L1 acquisition, high token frequency surface forms are produced earlier and more accurately in those forms compared to production in other forms and compared to production of other words that are inflected in lower token frequency forms (Aguado‐Orea, 2004; Braine et al., 1990; Finley, 2018; Marchman, 1997). The fact that the frequency of word lemmas plays a lesser role in the accurate retrieval of inflected word‐forms compared to the token frequency of an inflected word‐form itself has been key evidence in the development of emergentist theories of language acquisition that posit chunk‐based learning from usage, construction grammar, and linguistic structure as processing history.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%