Linguistic typology studies the range of structures present in human language. The main goal of the field is to discover which sets of possible phenomena are universal, and which are merely frequent. For ex- ample, all languages have vowels, while most—but not all—languages have an [u] sound. In this paper we present the first probabilistic treatment of a basic question in phonological typology: What makes a natural vowel inventory? We introduce a se- ries of deep stochastic point processes, and contrast them with previous computational, simulation-based approaches. We provide a comprehensive suite of experiments on over 200 distinct languages
Phonology is the study of sound patterns of the world’s languages. In all spoken languages, we find ...
This dissertation outlines a program for the theory of phonotactics—the theory of speakers\u27 knowl...
In this paper, we present a computational/corpus study of vowel harmony, which is a phonotactic cons...
Linguistic typology studies the range of structures present in human language. The main goal of the ...
We present a probabilistic model of phonotactics, the set of well-formed phoneme sequences in a lang...
International audienceData-driven research in phonetics and phonology relies massively on oral resou...
This dissertation explores to what extent phonological structure can be inferred from the distributi...
Common vowel inventories of languages tend to be better dispersed in the space of possible vowels t...
The use of language is one of the defining features of human cognition. Focusing here on two key fea...
We present a model for the evolution of vowel sounds in human languages, in which words behave as Br...
Vocal languages across the world are estimated to be approximately 6000, yet only a handful of them ...
An outstanding question in phonology is to what degree the learner uses distributional information r...
Vowel harmony, a phonological process whereby adjacent vowels share values of a phonological feature...
The number of phonemes varies widely among languages, ranging from about 10 to more than 140. The ov...
Computational phonology studies sound patterns in the world’s languages from a compu-tational perspe...
Phonology is the study of sound patterns of the world’s languages. In all spoken languages, we find ...
This dissertation outlines a program for the theory of phonotactics—the theory of speakers\u27 knowl...
In this paper, we present a computational/corpus study of vowel harmony, which is a phonotactic cons...
Linguistic typology studies the range of structures present in human language. The main goal of the ...
We present a probabilistic model of phonotactics, the set of well-formed phoneme sequences in a lang...
International audienceData-driven research in phonetics and phonology relies massively on oral resou...
This dissertation explores to what extent phonological structure can be inferred from the distributi...
Common vowel inventories of languages tend to be better dispersed in the space of possible vowels t...
The use of language is one of the defining features of human cognition. Focusing here on two key fea...
We present a model for the evolution of vowel sounds in human languages, in which words behave as Br...
Vocal languages across the world are estimated to be approximately 6000, yet only a handful of them ...
An outstanding question in phonology is to what degree the learner uses distributional information r...
Vowel harmony, a phonological process whereby adjacent vowels share values of a phonological feature...
The number of phonemes varies widely among languages, ranging from about 10 to more than 140. The ov...
Computational phonology studies sound patterns in the world’s languages from a compu-tational perspe...
Phonology is the study of sound patterns of the world’s languages. In all spoken languages, we find ...
This dissertation outlines a program for the theory of phonotactics—the theory of speakers\u27 knowl...
In this paper, we present a computational/corpus study of vowel harmony, which is a phonotactic cons...