22 research outputs found
The Zipfian paradigm cell filling problem
This chapter proposes that the stable coexistence of regular and irregular patterns can be understood in terms of a trade-off between the opposing communicative pressures imposed by predictability and discriminability. On this view, irregularity is not ‘defective’ or ‘anomalous’. Instead, irregular formations exhibit an enhanced discriminability that brings them into maximal conformance with precepts like the ‘one form - one meaning principle’, while allowing them to act as attractors within a larger system. Conversely, regularity is neither ‘optimal’ nor ‘normative’. Regular patterns serve to facilitate predictability within a system. In order for regular items to perform this function, it must be possible to assign partially attested paradigms that exhaust the variation in the system. We suggest that a correlation between lexical neighbourhoods and patterns of co-filled cells bootstraps this analogical process
Derivational morphology in the German mental lexicon A dual mechanism account
Includes article entitled 'The processing of ambiguous sentences by first and second language learners of English' by Clauder Felser ...[et al.]SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:3812.0975(vol 40) / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo