Syllables and their beginnings have a special role in the mental lexicon

Author:

Sun Yue1ORCID,Poeppel David123

Affiliation:

1. Ernst Strüngmann Institute for Neuroscience in Cooperation with Max Planck Society, Frankfurt am Main 60528, Germany

2. Department of Psychology, New York University, New York, NY 10003

3. Max Planck-New York University Center for Language, Music, and Emotion, New York, NY 10003

Abstract

The beginnings of words are, in some informal sense, special. This intuition is widely shared, for example, when playing word games. Less apparent is whether the intuition is substantiated empirically and what the underlying organizational principle(s) might be. Here, we answer this seemingly simple question in a quantitatively clear way. Based on arguments about the interplay between lexical storage and speech processing, we examine whether the distribution of information among different speech sounds of words is governed by a critical computational unit for online speech perception and production: syllables. By analyzing lexical databases of twelve languages, we demonstrate that there is a compelling asymmetry between syllable beginnings (onsets) versus ends (codas) in their involvement in distinguishing words stored in the lexicon. In particular, we show that the functional advantage of syllable onset reflects an asymmetrical distribution of lexical informativeness within the syllable unit but not an effect of a global decay of informativeness from the beginning to the end of a word. The converging finding across languages from a range of typological families supports the conjecture that the syllable unit, while being a critical primitive for both speech perception and production, is also a key organizational constraint for lexical storage.

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference71 articles.

1. Foundations of Language

2. The Mental Lexicon

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4. G. K. Zipf, Human Behavior and the Principle of Least Effort (Addison-Wesley, 1949).

5. Word lengths are optimized for efficient communication

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