The exploitation of distributional information in syllable processing

Category

Journal Article

Authors

Perruchet, P., Peereman, R.

Year

2004

Title

The exploitation of distributional information in syllable processing

Journal / book / conference

Journal of Neurolinguistics

Abstract

There is now growing evidence that people are sensitive to the statistical regularities embedded into linguistic utterances, but the exact nature of the distributional information to which human performance is sensitive is an issue that has been surprisingly neglected as yet. In order to address this issue, we first propose an overview of some basic measures of association, going from the simple co-occurrence frequency to the normative measure of contingency, rphi : We then report an experiment collecting judgments of word-likeness as a function of the relationship between the phonemes composing the rimes (VC). The contingency between Vs and Cs, as assessed by rphi ; was the best predictor of children and adult judgments. Surprisingly, the forward transitional probability (pC/V), which is the main measure considered by language researchers, was a poor predictor of performance, whereas the backward transitional probability (pV/C) made a sizeable contribution. We then analyze the ability of computational models to account for these results, successively considering a connectionist model based on the automatic computation of statistical regularities (SRN) [Cogn. Sci. 14 (1990) 179] and a model in which the sensitivity to statistical regularities emerges as a by-product of the attentional processing of the incoming information, Parser. Somewhat ironically, Parser, which implements no specific mechanisms for statistical computations, proves to be a better predictor of performance than the SRN. The generality of these results, and their implications for the issue of automaticity, are discussed.

Issue

2-3

Volume

17

Pages

97-119

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