Abstract

A learner’s linguistic input is more variable if it comes from a greater number of speakers. Higher speaker input variability has been shown to facilitate the acquisition of phonemic boundaries, since data drawn from multiple speakers provides more information about the distribution of phonemes in a speech community. It has also been proposed that speaker input variability may have a systematic influence on individual-level learning of morphology, which can in turn influence the group-level characteristics of a language. Languages spoken by larger groups of people have less complex morphology than those spoken in smaller communities. While a mechanism by which the number of speakers could have such an effect is yet to be convincingly identified, differences in speaker input variability, which is thought to be larger in larger groups, may provide an explanation. By hindering the acquisition, and hence faithful cross-generational transfer, of complex morphology, higher speaker input variability may result in structural simplification. We assess this claim in two experiments which investigate the effect of such variability on language learning, considering its influence on a learner’s ability to segment a continuous speech stream and acquire a morphologically complex miniature language. We ultimately find no evidence to support the proposal that speaker input variability influences language learning and so cannot support the hypothesis that it explains how population size determines the structural properties of language.

Highlights

  • Languages evolve, adapting to pressures which arise from their learning and use [1]

  • In the remainder of this paper we describe two experiments designed to test the effects of speaker input variability on language acquisition, and test the plausibility of speaker input variability as a mechanism explaining how group size influences morphological complexity

  • There is no evidence to support the proposal that speaker input variability could influence morphology learning

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Summary

Introduction

Languages evolve, adapting to pressures which arise from their learning and use [1] As these pressures may be different in different physical, demographic and sociocultural environments, non-linguistic factors may systematically determine linguistic features [2,3,4,5]. Identifying those factors which affect the structural properties of language, and establishing the mechanisms by which they operate, will shed light on why languages exhibit different degrees of grammatical complexity [4] and how individual-level learning interacts with the PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0129463. This may explain observable differences in languages spoken by different types of social groups in different environments [2,3,4,5, 10]

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