This paper investigates the existence of systematicity between two similarity-based representations of the lexicon, one focusing on word-form and another one based on cooccurrence statistics in speech, which captures aspects of syntax and semantics. An analysis of the three most frequent form-homogeneous word groups in a Spanish speech corpus (cvcv, cvccv and cvcvcv words) supports the existence of systematicity: words that sound similar tend to occur in the same lexical contexts in speech. A lexicon that is highly systematic in this respect, however, may lead to confusion between similar-sounding words that appear in similar contexts. Exploring the impact of different phonological features on systematicity reveals that while some features (such as sharing consonants or the stress pattern) seem to underlie the measured systematicity, others (particularly, sharing the stressed vowel) oppose it, perhaps to help discriminate between words that systematicity may render ambiguous.
2024. Systematic mappings of sound to meaning: A theoretical review. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 31:2 ► pp. 627 ff.
Cassani, Giovanni & Niklas Limacher
2022. Not just form, not just meaning: Words with consistent form-meaning mappings are learned earlier. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 75:8 ► pp. 1464 ff.
de Varda, Andrea Gregor & Carlo Strapparava
2022. A Cross‐Modal and Cross‐lingual Study of Iconicity in Language: Insights From Deep Learning. Cognitive Science 46:6
de Varda, Andrea Gregor & Carlo Strapparava
2020. Phonological Layers of Meaning: A Computational Exploration of Sound Iconicity. In Proceedings of the Seventh Italian Conference on Computational Linguistics CLiC-it 2020, ► pp. 144 ff.
Jee, Hana, Monica Tamariz & Richard Shillcock
2022. Exploring meaning-sound systematicity in Korean. Journal of East Asian Linguistics 31:1 ► pp. 45 ff.
Jee, Hana, Monica Tamariz & Richard Shillcock
2022. Systematicity in language and the fast and slow creation of writing systems: Understanding two types of non-arbitrary relations between orthographic characters and their canonical pronunciation. Cognition 226 ► pp. 105197 ff.
Matzinger, Theresa & Nikolaus Ritt
2022. Phonotactically probable word shapes represent attractors in the cultural evolution of sound patterns. Cognitive Linguistics 33:2 ► pp. 415 ff.
Rogers, Phillip G. & Stefan Th. Gries
2022. Grammatical Gender Disambiguates Syntactically Similar Nouns. Entropy 24:4 ► pp. 520 ff.
Shafaei-Bajestan, Elnaz, Peter Uhrig & R. Harald Baayen
Kempe, Vera, Nicolas Gauvrit, Nikolay Panayotov, Sheila Cunningham & Monica Tamariz
2021. Amount of Learning and Signal Stability Modulate Emergence of Structure and Iconicity in Novel Signaling Systems. Cognitive Science 45:11
Mollica, Francis, Geoff Bacon, Noga Zaslavsky, Yang Xu, Terry Regier & Charles Kemp
2021. The forms and meanings of grammatical markers support efficient communication. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 118:49
Fourtassi, Abdellah & Michael C. Frank
2020. How optimal is word recognition under multimodal uncertainty?. Cognition 199 ► pp. 104092 ff.
Carr, Jon W., Kenny Smith, Hannah Cornish & Simon Kirby
2017. The Cultural Evolution of Structured Languages in an Open‐Ended, Continuous World. Cognitive Science 41:4 ► pp. 892 ff.
Dautriche, Isabelle, Kyle Mahowald, Edward Gibson & Steven T. Piantadosi
2017. Wordform Similarity Increases With Semantic Similarity: An Analysis of 100 Languages. Cognitive Science 41:8 ► pp. 2149 ff.
Dautriche, Isabelle, Kyle Mahowald, Edward Gibson, Anne Christophe & Steven T. Piantadosi
2017. Words cluster phonetically beyond phonotactic regularities. Cognition 163 ► pp. 128 ff.
Chen, Na, Kanji Tanaka, Miki Namatame & Katsumi Watanabe
2016. Color-Shape Associations in Deaf and Hearing People. Frontiers in Psychology 7
Fay, Nicolas, Mark Ellison & Simon Garrod
2014. Iconicity. Pragmatics & Cognition 22:2 ► pp. 244 ff.
Monaghan, Padraic, Richard C. Shillcock, Morten H. Christiansen & Simon Kirby
2014. How arbitrary is language?. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 369:1651 ► pp. 20130299 ff.
Ellison, T. Mark
2013. Categorisation as Topographic Mapping between Uncorrelated Spaces. In Algorithmic Probability and Friends. Bayesian Prediction and Artificial Intelligence [Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 7070], ► pp. 131 ff.
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