A well-established principle of language is that there is a preference for closely related words to be close together in the sentence. This can be expressed as a preference for dependency length mini-mization (DLM). In this study, we explore quantitatively the degree to which natural languages reflect DLM. We extract the dependencies from natural language text and reorder the words in such a way as to minimize dependency length. Comparing the original text with these optimal linearizations (and also with random linearizations) reveals the degree to which natural language minimizes depen-dency length. Tests on English data show that English shows a strong effect of DLM, with depen-dency length much closer to optimal than to random; the optim...
Previous research has shown cross-linguistically that the human language parser prefers constituent ...
The structure of a sentence can be represented as a network where vertices are words and edges indic...
We demonstrate a substantial improvement on one of the most celebrated empirical laws in the study o...
A wide range of evidence points to a preference for syntactic structures in which dependencies are s...
Explaining the variation between human languages and the constraints on that variation is a core goa...
The extent to which the organization of nat-ural language grammars reflects a drive to minimize depe...
International audienceDependency length minimization (DLM, also called dependency distance minimizat...
International audienceIt has been extensively observed that languages minimise the distance between ...
Word order is one of the most readily observed aspects of the syntax of human language. This thesis ...
A prominent principle in explaining a range of word-order regularities is dependency locality, which...
Previous studies have claimed that language structures tend to minimize the linear distance between ...
Mixing dependency lengths from sequences of different length is a common practice in language resear...
Linguistic complexity is a measure of the cognitive difficulty of human language processing. The pr...
223 p.Within the last years, evidence for a general preference towards grammars reducing the linear ...
Dependency distance minimization (DDm) is a word order principle favouring the placement of syntacti...
Previous research has shown cross-linguistically that the human language parser prefers constituent ...
The structure of a sentence can be represented as a network where vertices are words and edges indic...
We demonstrate a substantial improvement on one of the most celebrated empirical laws in the study o...
A wide range of evidence points to a preference for syntactic structures in which dependencies are s...
Explaining the variation between human languages and the constraints on that variation is a core goa...
The extent to which the organization of nat-ural language grammars reflects a drive to minimize depe...
International audienceDependency length minimization (DLM, also called dependency distance minimizat...
International audienceIt has been extensively observed that languages minimise the distance between ...
Word order is one of the most readily observed aspects of the syntax of human language. This thesis ...
A prominent principle in explaining a range of word-order regularities is dependency locality, which...
Previous studies have claimed that language structures tend to minimize the linear distance between ...
Mixing dependency lengths from sequences of different length is a common practice in language resear...
Linguistic complexity is a measure of the cognitive difficulty of human language processing. The pr...
223 p.Within the last years, evidence for a general preference towards grammars reducing the linear ...
Dependency distance minimization (DDm) is a word order principle favouring the placement of syntacti...
Previous research has shown cross-linguistically that the human language parser prefers constituent ...
The structure of a sentence can be represented as a network where vertices are words and edges indic...
We demonstrate a substantial improvement on one of the most celebrated empirical laws in the study o...