Dependency distance minimization (DDm) is a word order principle favouring the placement of syntactically related words close to each other in sentences. Massive evidence of the principle has been reported for more than a decade with the help of syntactic dependency treebanks where long sentences abound. However, it has been predicted theoretically that the principle is more likely to be beaten in short sequences by the principle of surprisal minimization (predictability maximization). Here we introduce a simple binomial test to verify such a hypothesis. In short sentences, we find anti-DDm for some languages from different families. Our analysis of the syntactic dependency structures suggests that anti-DDm is produced by star trees.Peer Re...
The syntactic structure of a sentence is often represented using syntactic dependency trees. The sum...
Thesis: Ph. D. in Cognitive Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Brain and ...
Linguistic complexity is a measure of the cognitive difficulty of human language processing. The pr...
Dependency distance minimization (DDm) is a word order principle favouring the placement of syntacti...
Dependency distance minimization (DDm) is a well-established principle of word order. It has been pr...
A prominent principle in explaining a range of word-order regularities is dependency locality, which...
A wide range of evidence points to a preference for syntactic structures in which dependencies are s...
It is often stated that human languages, as other biological systems, are shaped by cost-cutting pre...
International audienceIt has been extensively observed that languages minimise the distance between ...
© 2020 Printed with the permission of Richard Futrell, Roger P. Levy, & Edward Gibson. This work f...
Previous research has shown cross-linguistically that the human language parser prefers constituent ...
International audienceDependency length minimization (DLM, also called dependency distance minimizat...
The syntactic structure of a sentence is often represented using syntactic dependency trees. The sum...
The structure of a sentence can be represented as a network where vertices are words and edges indic...
A well-established principle of language is that there is a preference for closely related words to ...
The syntactic structure of a sentence is often represented using syntactic dependency trees. The sum...
Thesis: Ph. D. in Cognitive Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Brain and ...
Linguistic complexity is a measure of the cognitive difficulty of human language processing. The pr...
Dependency distance minimization (DDm) is a word order principle favouring the placement of syntacti...
Dependency distance minimization (DDm) is a well-established principle of word order. It has been pr...
A prominent principle in explaining a range of word-order regularities is dependency locality, which...
A wide range of evidence points to a preference for syntactic structures in which dependencies are s...
It is often stated that human languages, as other biological systems, are shaped by cost-cutting pre...
International audienceIt has been extensively observed that languages minimise the distance between ...
© 2020 Printed with the permission of Richard Futrell, Roger P. Levy, & Edward Gibson. This work f...
Previous research has shown cross-linguistically that the human language parser prefers constituent ...
International audienceDependency length minimization (DLM, also called dependency distance minimizat...
The syntactic structure of a sentence is often represented using syntactic dependency trees. The sum...
The structure of a sentence can be represented as a network where vertices are words and edges indic...
A well-established principle of language is that there is a preference for closely related words to ...
The syntactic structure of a sentence is often represented using syntactic dependency trees. The sum...
Thesis: Ph. D. in Cognitive Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Brain and ...
Linguistic complexity is a measure of the cognitive difficulty of human language processing. The pr...