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1
Compositional processing emerges in neural networks solving math problems
In: Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, vol 43, iss 43 (2021)
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2
Lexical Strata and Phonotactic Perplexity Minimization
In: Proceedings of the Annual Meetings on Phonology; Proceedings of the 2020 Annual Meeting on Phonology ; 2377-3324 (2021)
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3
Predicting surface forms in complex inflectional paradigms through phonological constraints
In: Proceedings of the Annual Meetings on Phonology; Proceedings of the 2019 Annual Meeting on Phonology ; 2377-3324 (2020)
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4
Evidence for Gradient Input Features from Sino-Japanese Compound Accent
In: Proceedings of the Annual Meetings on Phonology; Proceedings of the 2018 Annual Meeting on Phonology ; 2377-3324 (2019)
Abstract: This paper argues that pitch accent patterns of two-member Sino-Japanese compounds, hitherto considered unpredictable, can be strongly predicted by positing gradiently-valued accent features in the input, in the framework of Gradient Symbolic Computation "GSC", (Smolensky and Goldrick 2016). A simple machine-learning algorithm finds accent-affecting propensities = activations that collectively work for a set of compounds with frequently-occurring morphemes from the NHK corpus. I show that gradient input representations are needed to explain these kinds of phenomena. Examining a set of examples in which switches of morpheme order can change the accent pattern in ways that prosody cannot account for, I show that such phenomena can be explained by GSC but not by systems that have discrete-valued inputs and weighted, lexically-indexed constraints, thus providing evidence in favour of the GSC framework.
Keyword: Gradient Symbolic Computation; pitch accent; predictability
URL: http://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/amphonology/article/view/4571
https://doi.org/10.3765/amp.v7i0.4571
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5
Phonological processes interacting with the lexicon : variable and non-regular effects in Japanese phonology ...
Rosen, Eric Robert. - : The University of British Columbia, 2001
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6
Phonological processes interacting with the lexicon : variable and non-regular effects in Japanese phonology
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7
The postposing construction in Japanese
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