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UMMM, Nov. 1. 2009 MIT Young Ah Do (youngah@mit.edu). Child preference of base correspondence. Children vs. Adults- Regular verb inflection. aki-ka ca-n-ta . (children & adults) baby-nom sleep - present - decl. Children vs. Adults- Irregular verb inflection.
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UMMM, Nov. 1. 2009 MIT Young Ah Do (youngah@mit.edu) Child preference of base correspondence
Children vs. Adults-Regular verb inflection • aki-ka ca-n-ta. (children & adults) • baby-nom sleep-present-decl.
Children vs. Adults-Irregular verb inflection • kangmuɾ-i hɨɾɨ-n-ta. (adults) • river-nom flow-present -decl. • kangmuɾ-i hɨllə-o-n-ta. (children) • river-nom flow -toward-present-decl.
Overview • The child inflection of irregular verb is complex. • They do have excellent knowledge of the whole inflectional system. • The preference of more complex inflection especially for irregular verbs is to satisfy high ranked output-output correspondence.
Verbal suffixes • Three categories of suffixes • A: -ɑ/-ə initial suffixes • tak’-ɑ (to clean), mək-ə (to eat), kɑ-ɑ> kɑ (to go) • B/C: -ɨ/consonant initial suffixes • tak’-ɨni, mək-ɨni, ka-ni • tak’-k’o, mək-k’o, ka-ko
Functions of each suffixal category • A : mood morpheme or semantically empty • -ɑ/ə • mək-ə: declarative, interrogative, imperative • -ɑ/ə + tense+ mood • mək-ə-ss-t’a : ate • -ɑ/ə + aspectual + mood • mək-ə-po-ta : try eating
Functions of each suffixal category • B/C: clausal or mood morpheme • -ɨni: causal • mək-ɨni: Since (I) eat …, / eat … therefore, • -ɨmyən: conditional • mək-ɨmyən: if (I) eat …, • -ko: connective • mək-k’o: eat and • -ta: declarative • mək-t’a: eat • -ni: question • mək-ni? : Do (you) eat… ?
The shape of stems Regulars vs. Irregulars • Regular verbs • Same stem across different suffixes • A: tak’-ɑ B: tak’-ɨni C: tak’-k’o (to clean) • Irregular verbs • Different stems with respect to the suffixal categories • A: tow-ɑ B: tou-ɨni >touni C: top-k’o ( to help)
Overuse of A form • Innovative patterns are frequently observed from the inflection of irregular verbs. • Innovations are mostly based on the A form. (Kang 2006, Bak 2004, Park 2002, and AKS 1990-1995). • hæ, ha-ni, ha-ko (to do) • => hæ, hæ-ni, hæ-ko • tow-ɑ, tou-ni, top-k’o (to help) • => tow-ɑ, tow-ni, tow-ko
Overuse of A form-Hypothesis 1 • High frequency • In adult Korean, A form mood marker functions as a default mood marker, in the respect that it is in free alternation with more specific mood markers. (Kim and Philip 1998) • Children hear A form most frequently in the early age. (Lee et al. 2003)
Overuse of A form- Hypothesis 2 • Base dependency • Computational modeling of learning (Albright and Kang 2009) using Minimal Generalization Learner algorithm (Albright and Hayes 2002, 2003) • Higher predictability of the paradigm from A form than from B or C form.
Predictions from two hypotheses • Frequency effect (Hypothesis 1) predicts that children will overuse A form both for regular and irregular verb inflection. • Base dependency (Hypothesis 2) predicts that children will overuse A form for irregular verb inflection but not for regular one. • The current study will support hypothesis 2.
An Experiment • Picture description, asking the inflection of the verbs. • jəca-nɨn _______. • A woman-NOM _____. (expected answer: declarative form of ‘sing’)
The design of an experiment • (1) The context where either B or C suffix forms can be observed • Sentence co-ordinating conjunction
(1) B or C suffixation • Sentence co-ordinating conjunctions are realized by the suffixation of B or C suffix after verb stem in Korean. • -ko (C suffix) ‘and‘ • Jane-ɨn ca-ko John-ɨn cʰumcʰu-n-ta. • Jane-NOM sleep-and John-NOM dance-present-decl.
More examples • -ko (C suffix), -ɨmyə (B suffix) ‘and’ • top-k’o ‘help and … ‘ • tou-myə(<tou-ɨmyə) ‘help and … ‘ • -ciman (C suffix), -ɨna (B suffix) ‘but’ • top-ciman ‘help but … ‘ • tou-na(<tou-ɨna) ‘help but … ‘ • -kəna (C suffix) ‘or’ • top-kəna ‘help or … ‘
Tense marker and conjuncts • Tense morpheme is allowed only at final clause. • Stem-conjunct, stem-tense-decl • ka-ko, o-n-ta (go-and, come-present-decl) • * ka-n-ko, o-n-ta (go-present-and, come-present-decl) • *ka-ko, o-ta (go-and, come-decl) • *ka-n-ko, o-ta (go-present-and, come-decl) • ka-ko, o-a-ss-t’a (go-and, come-a-past-decl-> went and came) • Let us assume empty tense marker before conjunct • [ø-conj], [tense-decl]
(2) Regular vs. Irregular • Regular and irregular verbs are distributed in a coordinated sentence as a pair. • Stimuli • Subject ___(regular verb), subject ___ (irregular verb). & • Subject ___(irregular verb), subject ___ (regular verb).
An example of stimuli • Namcatul-un ______, jəcatul-un ____. • Men-nom ______, women-nom ____. • expected answer: run/walk, are running/ are walking…
Subjects • 8 children (4;2~7;9) • 5 girls and 3 boys • Having morphophonological knowledge of the verb inflection • Able to inflect verbs with all three categories of suffixes • 4 adults
The design of stimuli • Among 159 irregular verbs in Korean • 54 verbs which seem to be familiar to children were chosen. • easy and frequent verbs • 54 sentences • #27 <irregular, regular> • #27 <regular, irregular>
Result • Among 54 sentences, 30 cases are analyzed where all subjects give same description of the picture. • #18 <Reg, Irreg>, #12 <Irreg, Reg> • This picture is described as • A girl reads a book. • A girl studies. • ….
Result- Parallel structure of two verbs • Two verbs in a coordinated sentence are inflected in a parallel way. • talli-[ø-ko], kət-[nɨn-ta] • run-[ø-and], walk-[present-decl] • kəɾ-ə-[ka-ø-ko], talli-ə-[o-n-ta] • walk-[away-ø-and], run-[toward-present-decl] • DEP-C1C2, MAX-C1C2
Result- Child errors • A forms are used where B/C forms are required. • cup-nɨn-ta (pick-present-decl) • -> *cuw-n-ta • No case where B/C forms substitute A form. • kəɾ-ə-ka-n-ta (walk-away-present-decl) • -> * kət-ka-n-ta
Result-Child errors • Why do children overuse A form? • Frequency effect? • Base dependency?
Result- Asymmetry of the inflection • The preferred way of inflection is different according to the pair <REG, IRREG> and <IRREG,REG>.
Result- Asymmetry of the inflection • <REG,IRREG> • without aspectual morphemes • talli-ko, kət-nɨn-ta • run-[ø-and], walk-[present-decl] • <IRREG,REG> • with aspectual morphemes • kəɾ-[ə-ka-ø-ko], talli-[ə-ka-n-ta] • walk-[away-ø-and], run-[away-present-decl]
Process of structuring • Syntactic and semantic form is preliminarily planned both for 1st and 2nd conjuncts. • When 1st conjunct is planning phonological form, 2nd conjunct has syntactic form but not phonological form yet. • The phonological form of 2nd conjunct is inserted later by copying that of the 1st conjunct.
Syntactic/Semantic planning • The context determines the number of clauses and the position of conjunct/mood morpheme. • ____-TENSE-CONJUNCT, ____-TENSE-MOOD MORPHEME. • Semantic interpretation determines verb stems, tense markers, conjuncts and mood morphemes. • RUN-PRESENT-BUT, WALK-PRESENT-DECLARATIVE. • RUN TOWARD-PRS-BUT, WALK AWAY-PRS-DECL.
Syntactic/Semantic planning • The economy of the production • Unless speakers think aspectual morpheme is semantically necessary, they will not use aspectual morpheme for the economy of the production. • RUN-PRESENT-BUT, WALK-PRESENT-DECLARATIVE. • Let us call the form planned by syntactic and semantic consideration as “Target” (the target of the production).
Phonological planning-1st conjunct • Assuming the hypothesis that (a) A form is the base in Korean verbal paradigms (Albright and Kang 2009), and (b) children start out with high-ranking OO Faithfulness (McCarthy 1999, Hayes 2004), children modify the target if it violates base derivative identity (BD-ID) while adults do not.
Phonological planning-1st conjunct • In this process, they seek a way of modification which is semantically closest to the target. Let us call a modified form as “Realize”. • In other words, “Realize” should have minimal violation to the “Target”. • In the current picture description task, children insert an aspectual morpheme which enables more specific description of the context, with keeping the original meaning of “Target”.
Phonological planning of 1st conjunct • The inflection of regular verb 35
Phonological planning of 1st conjunct • The inflection of irregular verb
Phonological planning of 2nd conjunct • After the phonological form is determined in 1st conjunct, 2nd conjunct copies the same structure in order to make structural parallelism in a coordinated sentence. • DEP-C1,C2 • Every morpheme of conjunct 2 has a correspondence in conjunct 1 • MAX-C1,C2 • Every morpheme of conjunct 1 has a correspondence in conjunct 2
Phonological planning of 2nd conjunct • When the 1st conjunct is regular verb 38 38
Phonological planning of 2nd conjunct • When the 1st conjunct is irregular verb 39 39 39
Phonological planning in coordinated sentences • The choice of using A or B/C form is determined by the first conjunct in coordinated sentences. • The shape of the second verb is determined by the requirement of parallelism (i.e., to be identical to the shape of the first verb).
Base correspondence • When regular verb is to be inflected in 1st conjunct, any inflection can satisfy base correspondence because the stem is identical across different suffixations. • When irregular verb is to be inflected in 1st conjunct, inflection depending on B/C form violates base correspondence while that on A form does not. • Therefore, children use excessive morpheme especially for irregular verb inflection for satisfying high-ranked output-output faithfulness.
Implication • The asymmetrical inflectional patterns with respect to the (ir)regularity of the verb argue that overuse of A form is triggered not by high frequency effect but by grammatical consideration: high-ranked output-output faithfulness.