Referent properties and word order in emerging communication systems
dc.contributor.advisor
Kirby, Simon
dc.contributor.advisor
Culbertson, Jennifer
dc.contributor.advisor
Smith, Kenny
dc.contributor.advisor
Schouwstra, Marieke
dc.contributor.author
Kirton, Fiona
dc.contributor.sponsor
other
en
dc.date.accessioned
2021-09-09T13:47:54Z
dc.date.available
2021-09-09T13:47:54Z
dc.date.issued
2021-07-31
dc.description.abstract
Why do languages look the way they do? This question lies at the core of much of linguistics
research, and answering it can shine a light on the relationship between individual cognitive
preferences and linguistic structure. One area that has attracted particular attention is basic
word order. Many mature languages exhibit a fixed or dominant ordering of subject (S), object (O), and the verb (V). However, evidence from restricted communication systems, such
as emerging sign languages, shows that even before such conventions have been established,
language producers show strong ordering preferences. It has been suggested that SOV is the
natural ordering of entities in an event, and the default order used by all newly emerging languages. Over the past decade or so, a growing body of research has endeavoured to investigate
this question using the silent gesture paradigm in which participants describe events using only
their hands. This work has been instrumental in uncovering a range of factors that influence the
way people convey information about events in the absence of linguistic conventions, challenging
the view that there is a single natural order.
In this thesis, I present a series of experimental studies, implementing new techniques for
data collection and analysis, showing how properties of individual referents influence the word
orders people use to convey information about simple transitive events. I start, in Chapter
2, with a detailed review of the silent gesture literature, highlighting the numerous accounts
that have been offered to explain word order preferences. One theme common to many of
these accounts is that there is a direct relationship between word order and the structural and
semantic properties of events. In Chapter 3, I report a silent gesture experiment in which I
investigate an additional, complementary factor, namely, the salience of entities in an event. In
the data analysis, I develop a novel computational method for inferring word order preferences
based on incomplete gesture strings. The results of this study suggest that the relationship
between salience and word order is not necessarily linear. Rather, manipulating the salience
of referents influences the perspective from which a producer frames an event, which in turn
influences structural choices. The results, however, are inconclusive about whether these structural choices reflect a direct mapping from conceptual structure to word order. In Chapter 4,
I investigate the role of another operational factor: biases specific to the gestural modality. I
report three experiments in which participants conveyed information about events by selecting
pictorial representations of event components. Although the findings from this study are inconclusive, they nevertheless highlight important questions about the effects of other task-specific
factors such as the way elicitation stimuli are presented.
In Chapter 5, I focus on the relationship between word order and one of the most fundamental determiners and drivers of linguistic structure - animacy. Using a series of artificial
language learning experiments, I test two existing accounts that have been proposed to explain
animacy-based word order variation. One emphasizes communicative pressures arising from the
potential ambiguity of events involving two human referents; the other focuses on the salience
of humans relative to inanimate objects. The results of this study offer tentative support for the
salience-based hypothesis. Nevertheless, I suggest that further work is required to understand
how language producers negotiate the communicative challenge of accurately conveying information about events where the role played by each of the noun referents is ambiguous. Echoing
the conclusions from the previous two studies, I also highlight the need for more research to
better understand the role played by other factors, such as modality and native language.
Overall, the studies reported in this thesis demonstrate that word order in newly developing
languages not only reflects structural and semantic properties of events, but is also influenced by
properties of referents interacting in an event, for example, salience and humanness. While the
overall findings are inconclusive about the precise nature of this relationship, they nevertheless
add to a growing body of literature showing that structural choices in the absence of linguistic
conventions do not conform to a single natural order, but are subject to the effects of a range
of potentially interacting factors.
en
dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/38008
dc.identifier.uri
https://doi.org/10.7488/era/1279
dc.language.iso
en
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
en
dc.subject
linguistic structure
en
dc.subject
emerging sign languages
en
dc.subject
‘silent gesture’ methodology
en
dc.subject
word order influences
en
dc.subject
animacy of referents
en
dc.subject
concept of salience
en
dc.subject
salience of referents
en
dc.title
Referent properties and word order in emerging communication systems
en
dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
en
dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
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