A foundational goal of linguistics is to investigate whether shared features of the human cognitive system can explain how linguistic patterns are distributed across languages. In this paper we report a series of artificial language learning experiments which aim to test a hypothesised link between cognition and a persistent regularity of morpheme order: number morphemes (e.g., plural markers) tend to be ordered closer to noun stems than case morphemes (e.g., accusative markers) (Universal 39; Greenberg, 1963). We argue that this typological tendency may be driven by learners’ bias towards orders that reflect scopal relationships in morphosyntactic and semantic composition (Bybee, 1985; Rice, 2000; Culbertson & Adger, 2014). This bias is bo...
The distribution of typological patterns across languages has occupied considerable space in recent ...
Recent work has used artificial language experiments to argue that hierarchical representations driv...
As efficient systems of communication, languages are usually expected to map meanings to forms in a ...
Languages exhibit a tremendous amount of variation in how they organise and order morphemes within w...
Inflectional affixes expressing the same grammatical category (e.g., subject agreement) tend to appe...
Plural marking systems in natural languages follow an Animacy Hierarchy such that although it is com...
Morphological syncretism occurs in languages when one morphological category ‘merges’ with another. ...
Recent research has revealed several languages (e.g. Chintang, Rarámuri, Tagalog, Murrinhpatha) that...
Noun phrase word order varies cross-linguistically, however, two distributional asymmetries have att...
Agreement markers that refer to the same feature or argument tend to be found in the same position (...
Conventional generative theories often consider language acquisition as governed by a set of learnin...
Morphological systems often reuse the same forms in different functions, creating what is known as s...
This thesis examines the learning and production of bound morphemes and how this linguistic behavio...
The idea that universal representations of hierarchical structure constrain patterns of linear order...
The present study examines how people learn language patterns involving plural suffixes. In language...
The distribution of typological patterns across languages has occupied considerable space in recent ...
Recent work has used artificial language experiments to argue that hierarchical representations driv...
As efficient systems of communication, languages are usually expected to map meanings to forms in a ...
Languages exhibit a tremendous amount of variation in how they organise and order morphemes within w...
Inflectional affixes expressing the same grammatical category (e.g., subject agreement) tend to appe...
Plural marking systems in natural languages follow an Animacy Hierarchy such that although it is com...
Morphological syncretism occurs in languages when one morphological category ‘merges’ with another. ...
Recent research has revealed several languages (e.g. Chintang, Rarámuri, Tagalog, Murrinhpatha) that...
Noun phrase word order varies cross-linguistically, however, two distributional asymmetries have att...
Agreement markers that refer to the same feature or argument tend to be found in the same position (...
Conventional generative theories often consider language acquisition as governed by a set of learnin...
Morphological systems often reuse the same forms in different functions, creating what is known as s...
This thesis examines the learning and production of bound morphemes and how this linguistic behavio...
The idea that universal representations of hierarchical structure constrain patterns of linear order...
The present study examines how people learn language patterns involving plural suffixes. In language...
The distribution of typological patterns across languages has occupied considerable space in recent ...
Recent work has used artificial language experiments to argue that hierarchical representations driv...
As efficient systems of communication, languages are usually expected to map meanings to forms in a ...