Summary information

Study title

Experimental Evidence for the Influence of Structure and Meaning on Linear Order in the Noun Phrase, 2017-2022

Creator

Culbertson, J, University of Edinburgh
Alexander, M, University of Groningen
Annie, H, University of Edinburgh
Klaus, A, UCL
David, A, QMUL

Study number / PID

856721 (UKDA)

10.5255/UKDA-SN-856721 (DOI)

Data access

Open

Series

Not available

Abstract

Recent work has used artificial language experiments to argue that hierarchical representations drive learners’ expectations about word order in complex noun phrases like these two green cars (Culbertson & Adger 2014; Martin, Ratitamkul, et al. 2019). When trained on a novel language in which individual modifiers come after the Noun, English speakers overwhelmingly assume that multiple nominal modifiers should be ordered such that Adjectives come closest to the Noun, then Numerals, then Demonstratives (i.e., N-Adj-Num-Dem or some subset thereof). This order transparently reflects a constituent structure in which Adjectives combine with Nouns to the exclusion of Numerals and Demonstratives, and Numerals combine with Noun+Adjective units to the exclusion of Demonstratives. This structure has also been claimed to derive frequency asymmetries in complex noun phrase order across languages (e.g., Cinque 2005). However, we show that features of the methodology used in these experiments potentially encourage participants to use a particular metalinguistic strategy that could yield this outcome without implicating constituency structure. Here, we use a more naturalistic artificial language learning task to investigate whether the preference for hierarchy-respecting orders is still found when participants do not use this strategy. We find that the preference still holds, and, moreover, as Culbertson & Adger (2014) speculate, that its strength reflects structural distance between modifiers. It is strongest when ordering Adjectives relative to Demonstratives, and weaker when ordering Numerals relative to Adjectives or Demonstratives relative to Numerals. Our results provide the strongest evidence yet for the psychological influence of hierarchical structure on word order preferences during learning.Languages can be very different from each other. For example, just focussing on the order of words, languages like English put adjectives before nouns ('red house') while...
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Methodology

Data collection period

31/08/2017 - 30/08/2022

Country

United Kingdom

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

Individual

Universe

Not available

Sampling procedure

Not available

Kind of data

Numeric
Text

Data collection mode

The data collection method for this study is artificial language learning. Participants are trained and testing on a miniature linguistics system. Participants were adult native English speakers recruited at a university in the UK and on Mechanical Turk.

Funding information

Grant number

ES/N018389/1

Access

Publisher

UK Data Service

Publication year

2023

Terms of data access

The Data Collection is available to any user without the requirement for registration for download/access.

Related publications

Not available