Testing a computational model of causative overgeneralizations: Child judgment and production data from English, Hebrew, Hindi, Japanese and K’iche’

Author:

Ambridge BenORCID,Doherty Laura,Maitreyee Ramya,Tatsumi TomokoORCID,Zicherman Shira,Mateo Pedro Pedro,Kawakami Ayuno,Bidgood AmyORCID,Pye Clifton,Narasimhan Bhuvana,Arnon Inbal,Bekman Dani,Efrati Amir,Fabiola Can Pixabaj Sindy,Marroquín Pelíz Mario,Julajuj Mendoza Margarita,Samanta Soumitra,Campbell Seth,McCauley Stewart,Berman Ruth,Misra Sharma Dipti,Bhaya Nair RukminiORCID,Fukumura Kumiko

Abstract

How do language learners avoid the production of verb argument structure overgeneralization errors (*The clown laughed the man c.f. The clown made the man laugh), while retaining the ability to apply such generalizations productively when appropriate? This question has long been seen as one that is both particularly central to acquisition research and particularly challenging. Focussing on causative overgeneralization errors of this type, a previous study reported a computational model that learns, on the basis of corpus data and human-derived verb-semantic-feature ratings, to predict adults’ by-verb preferences for less- versus more-transparent causative forms (e.g., * The clown laughed the man vs The clown made the man laugh) across English, Hebrew, Hindi, Japanese and K’iche Mayan. Here, we tested the ability of this model (and an expanded version with multiple hidden layers) to explain binary grammaticality judgment data from children aged 4;0-5;0, and elicited-production data from children aged 4;0-5;0 and 5;6-6;6 (N=48 per language). In general, the model successfully simulated both children’s judgment and production data, with correlations of r=0.5-0.6 and r=0.75-0.85, respectively, and also generalized to unseen verbs. Importantly, learners of all five languages showed some evidence of making the types of overgeneralization errors – in both judgments and production – previously observed in naturalistic studies of English (e.g., *I’m dancing it). Together with previous findings, the present study demonstrates that a simple learning model can explain (a) adults’ continuous judgment data, (b) children’s binary judgment data and (c) children’s production data (with no training of these datasets), and therefore constitutes a plausible mechanistic account of the acquisition of verbs’ argument structure restrictions.

Funder

Horizon 2020 Framework Programme

Economic and Social Research Council

Publisher

F1000 Research Ltd

Subject

Ocean Engineering,Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality

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