Stop the Morphological Cycle, I Want to Get Off: Modeling the Development of Fusion
Abstract
Historical linguists observe that many fusional (unsegmentable) morphological structures developed from agglutinative (segmentable) predecessors. Such changes may result when learners fail to acquire a phonological alternation, and instead, “chunk” the altered versions of morphemes and memorize them as underlying representations. We present a Bayesian model of this process, which learns which morphosyntactic properties are chunked together, what their underlying representations are, and what phonological processes apply to them. In simulations using artificial data, we provide quantitative support to two claims about agglutinative and fusional structures: that optional morphological markers discourage fusion from developing, but that stress-based vowel reduction encourages it.
Keywords: morphology; computational linguistics; fusion; agglutination; diachronic change, morphology, computational linguistics, fusion, agglutination, diachronic change
How to Cite:
Elsner, M., Johnson, M. B., Antetomaso, S. & Sims, A. D., (2020) “Stop the Morphological Cycle, I Want to Get Off: Modeling the Development of Fusion”, Society for Computation in Linguistics 3(1), 412-422. doi: https://doi.org/10.7275/33wn-nb03
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