Affixation patterns in native language and sequence processing by statistical learning mechanisms

Author(s)

Mikhail Ordin

Publication date

fevereiro, 2025

Keywords

suffixing bias; statistical learning; morphological typology; suffix effect; serial recall;
Synopsis

The suffixing bias (the tendency to exploit suffixes more often than prefixes to express grammatical meanings) in languages was identified a century ago, yet we still lack a clear account for why it emerged, namely, whether the bias emerged because general cognitive mechanisms shape languages to be more easily processed by available cognitive machinery, or if the bias is speech-specific and is determined by domain-specific mechanisms. We used statistical learning (SL) experiments to compare processing of suffixed and prefixed sequences on linguistic and non-linguistic material. SL is not speech-specific, and we observed the suffixing preference only on linguistic material, suggesting its language-specific origin. Moreover, morphological properties of native languages (existence of grammatical prefixes) modulate suffixing preferences in SL experiments only on linguistic material, suggesting limited cross-domain transfer.

Details
Publication type: International peer reviewed paper
Publication: Evolutionary Human Sciences
Volume: 7
Number: 11
Page Start: 1
Page End: 19
Page Length: 19
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/ehs.2025.6
ISSN: 2513-843X