The syntactic structure of sentences exhibits a striking regularity: dependencies tend to not cross when drawn above the sentence. We investigate two competing explanations. The traditional hypothesis is that this trend arises from an independent principle of syntax that reduces crossings practically to zero. An alternative to this view is the hypothesis that crossings are a side effect of dependency lengths, that is, sentences with shorter dependency lengths should tend to have fewer crossings. We are able to reject the traditional view in the majority of languages considered. The alternative hypothesis can lead to a more parsimonious theory of language.Peer Reviewed
A prominent principle in explaining a range of word-order regularities is dependency locality, which...
Here tree dependency structures are studied from three different perspectives: their degree variance...
International audienceIt has been extensively observed that languages minimise the distance between ...
The syntactic structure of sentences exhibits a striking regularity: dependencies tend to not cross ...
The structure of a sentence can be represented as a network where vertices are words and edges indic...
The syntactic structure of a sentence can be modeled as a tree where vertices are words and edges in...
The use of null hypotheses (in a statistical sense) is common in hard sciences but not in theoretica...
The syntactic structure of a sentence can be modelled as a tree, where vertices correspond to words ...
It has been hypothesized that the rather small number of crossings in real syntactic de...
Abstract The use of null hypotheses (in a statistical sense) is common in hard sci-ences but not in ...
Mixing dependency lengths from sequences of different length is a common practice in language resear...
Previous work suggests that when speakers linearize syntactic structures, they place longer and more...
A wide range of evidence points to a preference for syntactic structures in which dependencies are s...
Here we study the arrangement of vertices of trees in a 1-dimensional Euclidean space when the Eucli...
Explaining the variation between human languages and the constraints on that variation is a core goa...
A prominent principle in explaining a range of word-order regularities is dependency locality, which...
Here tree dependency structures are studied from three different perspectives: their degree variance...
International audienceIt has been extensively observed that languages minimise the distance between ...
The syntactic structure of sentences exhibits a striking regularity: dependencies tend to not cross ...
The structure of a sentence can be represented as a network where vertices are words and edges indic...
The syntactic structure of a sentence can be modeled as a tree where vertices are words and edges in...
The use of null hypotheses (in a statistical sense) is common in hard sciences but not in theoretica...
The syntactic structure of a sentence can be modelled as a tree, where vertices correspond to words ...
It has been hypothesized that the rather small number of crossings in real syntactic de...
Abstract The use of null hypotheses (in a statistical sense) is common in hard sci-ences but not in ...
Mixing dependency lengths from sequences of different length is a common practice in language resear...
Previous work suggests that when speakers linearize syntactic structures, they place longer and more...
A wide range of evidence points to a preference for syntactic structures in which dependencies are s...
Here we study the arrangement of vertices of trees in a 1-dimensional Euclidean space when the Eucli...
Explaining the variation between human languages and the constraints on that variation is a core goa...
A prominent principle in explaining a range of word-order regularities is dependency locality, which...
Here tree dependency structures are studied from three different perspectives: their degree variance...
International audienceIt has been extensively observed that languages minimise the distance between ...