Dependency distance minimization (DDm) is a well-established principle of word order. It has been predicted theoretically that DDm implies compression, namely the minimization of word lengths. This is a second order prediction because it links a principle with another principle, rather than a principle and a manifestation as in a first order prediction. Here we test that second order prediction with a parallel collection of treebanks controlling for annotation style with Universal Dependencies and Surface-Syntactic Universal Dependencies. To test it, we use a recently introduced score that has many mathematical and statistical advantages with respect to the widely used sum of dependency distances. We find that the prediction is confirmed by...
Previous research has shown cross-linguistically that the human language parser prefers constituent ...
International audienceIt has been extensively observed that languages minimise the distance between ...
In a recent article, Christiansen and Chater (2016) present a fundamental constraint on language, i....
Dependency distance minimization (DDm) is a word order principle favouring the placement of syntacti...
A prominent principle in explaining a range of word-order regularities is dependency locality, which...
It is often stated that human languages, as other biological systems, are shaped by cost-cutting pre...
International audienceThis present pilot study investigates the relationship between dependency dist...
Explaining the variation between human languages and the constraints on that variation is a core goa...
© 2020 Printed with the permission of Richard Futrell, Roger P. Levy, & Edward Gibson. This work f...
International audienceDependency length minimization (DLM, also called dependency distance minimizat...
A well-established principle of language is that there is a preference for closely related words to ...
A wide range of evidence points to a preference for syntactic structures in which dependencies are s...
The role of the hierarchical syntactic structure has been controversial in sentence processing: whil...
Linguistic complexity is a measure of the cognitive difficulty of human language processing. The pr...
The ability to produce and understand an unlimited number of different sentences is a hallmark of hu...
Previous research has shown cross-linguistically that the human language parser prefers constituent ...
International audienceIt has been extensively observed that languages minimise the distance between ...
In a recent article, Christiansen and Chater (2016) present a fundamental constraint on language, i....
Dependency distance minimization (DDm) is a word order principle favouring the placement of syntacti...
A prominent principle in explaining a range of word-order regularities is dependency locality, which...
It is often stated that human languages, as other biological systems, are shaped by cost-cutting pre...
International audienceThis present pilot study investigates the relationship between dependency dist...
Explaining the variation between human languages and the constraints on that variation is a core goa...
© 2020 Printed with the permission of Richard Futrell, Roger P. Levy, & Edward Gibson. This work f...
International audienceDependency length minimization (DLM, also called dependency distance minimizat...
A well-established principle of language is that there is a preference for closely related words to ...
A wide range of evidence points to a preference for syntactic structures in which dependencies are s...
The role of the hierarchical syntactic structure has been controversial in sentence processing: whil...
Linguistic complexity is a measure of the cognitive difficulty of human language processing. The pr...
The ability to produce and understand an unlimited number of different sentences is a hallmark of hu...
Previous research has shown cross-linguistically that the human language parser prefers constituent ...
International audienceIt has been extensively observed that languages minimise the distance between ...
In a recent article, Christiansen and Chater (2016) present a fundamental constraint on language, i....