Abstract

Typological work has established the existence of language universals – features or combinations of features that (co-) occur in unrelated languages more frequently than expected by chance. The origins of language universals are a fundamental question in language sciences as these universals are considered a reflection of cognitive mechanisms underlying human language. In this study, we use a miniature artificial language learning paradigm to explore whether a well-known universal – a preference for harmonic word ordering between adpositional and verb phrases (i.e., placing the head in a consistent position with respect to the complements across the two phrase types) – originates in biases during language learning and whether this preference interacts with memory constraints (operationalized as lexical retrieval difficulty). We first trained participants on miniature languages containing adpositional phrases of a deterministic word order (either prepositional or postpositional inputs) and then briefly exposed them to simple transitive sentences (verb-subject-object and subject-object-verb order, equally frequent in the input). At test, we asked learners to describe simple transitive scenes. We found that in the hard lexical retrieval condition, learners exposed to a postpositional language showed a preference for harmonic ordering but learners of the prepositional language did not, which is only partially consistent to the typological distribution. In the easy lexical retrieval condition, learners of neither the postpositional nor prepositional language showed a preference for harmonic ordering, indicating that this preference is modulated by memory constraints.

Highlights

  • Natural languages vary in many aspects, but this variation is not random

  • We turn to our main questions – whether learners prefer harmonic ordering across the adpositional phrase (AP) and verb phrase (VP) and whether this preference is modulated by memory constraints

  • We found no significant difference in SOV use between the prepositional language learners in the easy lexical retrieval condition and the prepositional language learners in the hard lexical retrieval condition or between the postpositional learners in the easy lexical retrieval condition and the postpositional learners in the hard lexical retrieval condition

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Work in linguistic typology has established the existence of statistical language universals – features or combinations of features that (co)-occur more frequently than expected by chance in unrelated languages (e.g., Greenberg, 1963; Dryer, 1992). Ever since their discovery, understanding the nature of language universals has been a fundamental question in the language sciences as most researchers agree that it could shed light on the cognitive mechanisms of human language processing and acquisition (e.g., Chomsky, 1965; Christiansen & Charter, 2008; Hawkins, 2014). Harmonic ordering has been found in the nominal domain

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call