<p>This chapter proposes that systems of semantic categories in the world's languages reflect the need for efficient communication, in that they near-optimally balance the competing principles of simplicity and informativeness. It first briefly reviews existing work that is relevant to the proposal. Next, it develops a general-purpose computational framework that instantiates the proposal, and applies it to three domains (a) color, (b) kinship, and (c) a domain in which objects are represented as binary feature vectors with qualitatively different structures. The analyses of color and kinship have shown that the framework accounts for cross-language data in both of these domains. The analysis of a domain defined in terms of binary feature v...
Functionalist accounts of language suggest that forms are paired with meanings in ways that support ...
Spatial terms in the world’s languages appear to reflect both universal conceptual tendencies and li...
Why do languages parcel human experience into categories in the ways they do, and to what extent do ...
Crosslinguistic research on domains including kinship, color, folk biology, number, and spatial rela...
Semantic categories in the world's languages often reflect a historical process of chaining: A name ...
Semantic categories in the world's languages appear to reflect both universal conceptual tendencies ...
We derive a principled information-theoretic account of cross-language semantic variation. Specifica...
In each semantic domain studied to date, there is considerable variation in how meanings are express...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2022The meanings expressed by the world’s languages hav...
How universal is human conceptual structure? The way concepts are organized in the human brain may r...
Modeling of semantic space is discussed with specific reference to the authors ’ NSF-funded project ...
Multilingual representations have mostly been evaluated based on their performance on specific tasks...
Categories such as 'animal' or 'furniture' play a pivotal role in processing, organizing, and commu...
Languages vary in their number of color terms. A widely accepted theory proposes that languages evol...
We distinguish different features in lexeme content which correspond to different types of features...
Functionalist accounts of language suggest that forms are paired with meanings in ways that support ...
Spatial terms in the world’s languages appear to reflect both universal conceptual tendencies and li...
Why do languages parcel human experience into categories in the ways they do, and to what extent do ...
Crosslinguistic research on domains including kinship, color, folk biology, number, and spatial rela...
Semantic categories in the world's languages often reflect a historical process of chaining: A name ...
Semantic categories in the world's languages appear to reflect both universal conceptual tendencies ...
We derive a principled information-theoretic account of cross-language semantic variation. Specifica...
In each semantic domain studied to date, there is considerable variation in how meanings are express...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2022The meanings expressed by the world’s languages hav...
How universal is human conceptual structure? The way concepts are organized in the human brain may r...
Modeling of semantic space is discussed with specific reference to the authors ’ NSF-funded project ...
Multilingual representations have mostly been evaluated based on their performance on specific tasks...
Categories such as 'animal' or 'furniture' play a pivotal role in processing, organizing, and commu...
Languages vary in their number of color terms. A widely accepted theory proposes that languages evol...
We distinguish different features in lexeme content which correspond to different types of features...
Functionalist accounts of language suggest that forms are paired with meanings in ways that support ...
Spatial terms in the world’s languages appear to reflect both universal conceptual tendencies and li...
Why do languages parcel human experience into categories in the ways they do, and to what extent do ...