5 research outputs found
A commentary on "The now-or-never bottleneck: a fundamental constraint on language", by Christiansen and Chater (2016)
In a recent article, Christiansen and Chater (2016) present a fundamental
constraint on language, i.e. a now-or-never bottleneck that arises from our
fleeting memory, and explore its implications, e.g., chunk-and-pass processing,
outlining a framework that promises to unify different areas of research. Here
we explore additional support for this constraint and suggest further
connections from quantitative linguistics and information theory
Parallels of human language in the behavior of bottlenose dolphins
A short review of similarities between dolphins and humans with the help of
quantitative linguistics and information theory
The placement of the head that maximizes predictability. An information theoretic approach
The minimization of the length of syntactic dependencies is a
well-established principle of word order and the basis of a mathematical theory
of word order. Here we complete that theory from the perspective of information
theory, adding a competing word order principle: the maximization of
predictability of a target element. These two principles are in conflict: to
maximize the predictability of the head, the head should appear last, which
maximizes the costs with respect to dependency length minimization. The
implications of such a broad theoretical framework to understand the
optimality, diversity and evolution of the six possible orderings of subject,
object and verb are reviewed.Comment: in press in Glottometric
The placement of the head that maximizes predictability: An information theoretic approach
The minimization of the length of syntactic dependencies is a well-established principle of word order and the basis of a mathematical theory of word order. Here we complete that theory from the perspective of information theory, adding a competing word order principle: the maximization of predictability of a target element. These two principles are in conflict: to maximize the predictability of the head, the head should appear last, which maximizes the costs with respect to dependency length minimization. The implications of such a broad theoretical framework to understand the optimality, diversity and evolution of the six possible orderings of subject, object and verb, are reviewed.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version