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Dutch plural inflection: the exception that proves the analogy
Authors:Keuleers Emmanuel  Sandra Dominiek  Daelemans Walter  Gillis Steven  Durieux Gert  Martens Evelyn
Institution:Center for Psycholinguistics, University of Antwerp, Belgium. emmanuel.keuleers@ua.ac.be
Abstract:We develop the view that inflection is driven partly by non-phonological analogy and that non-phonological information is of particular importance to the inflection of non-canonical roots, which in the view of Marcus, G. F., Brinkmann, U., Clahsen, H., Wiese, R., & Pinker, S. (1995). German inflection: the exception that proves the rule. Cognitive Psychology, 29, 189-256.] are inflected by a symbolic rule process. We used the Dutch plural to evaluate these claims. An analysis of corpus data shows that a model using non-phonological information (orthography) produces significantly fewer errors on plurals of non-canonical Dutch nouns, in particular borrowings, than a model that includes only phonological information. Moreover, we show that a double default system, as proposed by Pinker Pinker, S. (1999). Words and rules. London: Phoenix.], does not offer an advantage over the latter model. A second study, examining the use of orthography in an online plural production task, shows that, in Dutch, the chosen pseudoword plural is significantly affected by non-phonological information. A final simulation study confirms that these results are in line with a model of inflectional morphology that explains the inflection of non-canonical roots by non-phonological analogy instead of by a default rule process.
Keywords:Dual mechanism model  Memory based learning  Default  Rules  Similarity  Analogy  Inflection  Dutch plural  Non-canonical roots  Morphology
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