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Morphology in a Parallel, Distributed, Interactive Architecture of Language Production.

Vsevolod Kapatsinski1

  • 1Department of Linguistics, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, United States.

Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence
|March 21, 2022
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Speakers create new words through a parallel system where meaning activates word forms. A negative feedback loop prevents unwanted word forms, enabling controlled speech production and explaining language change phenomena.

Keywords:
degrammaticalizationinteractive activationlanguage productionnegative feedbackparadigm levelingparadigm uniformityparallel processingusage-based linguistics

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Area of Science:

  • Linguistics
  • Neuroscience
  • Computational Linguistics
  • Psycholinguistics

Background:

  • Investigates the cognitive and neural mechanisms underlying novel word production.
  • Synthesizes existing research in linguistics and neuroscience to propose a novel theoretical framework.
  • Addresses the interplay between semantic representations and phonological form activation in language generation.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To propose a parallel distributed architecture for the language system.
  • To explain the mechanisms behind novel word formation, paradigm uniformity, and paradigm leveling.
  • To elucidate the role of negative feedback in regulating language production and preventing unintended word forms.

Main Methods:

  • Theoretical synthesis of linguistic and neuroscience research.
  • Computational modeling of semantic activation and form chunk competition.
  • Analysis of diachronic language change phenomena, including degrammaticalization and affix liberation.

Main Results:

  • A parallel distributed architecture explains how semantic representations activate competing form chunks.
  • A negative feedback cycle regulates word production, suppressing unintended semantics and controlling speech initiation.
  • This model accounts for paradigm leveling, degrammaticalization, affix liberation, and paradigm gaps.

Conclusions:

  • The proposed architecture and negative feedback mechanism offer a unified explanation for word production and language change.
  • Provides a mechanistic account for phenomena previously unexplained by usage-based models.
  • Highlights the necessity of paradigmatic mappings in specific cases, explained by spreading activation under feedback inhibition.