Cumulative Frequency Can Explain Cognate Facilitation in Language Models

Irene E. Winther, Yevgen Matusevych, Martin J. Pickering

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperAcademic

5 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Cognates – words which share form and meaning across two languages – have been extensively studied to understand the bilingual mental lexicon. One consistent finding is that bilingual speakers process cognates faster than non-cognates, an effect known as cognate facilitation. Yet, there is no agreement on the underlying factors driving this effect. In this paper, we use computational modeling to test whether the effect can be explained by the cumulative frequency hypothesis. We train a computational language model on two language pairs (Dutch–English, Norwegian–English) under different conditions of input presentation and test it on sentence stimuli from two existing studies with bilingual speakers of those languages. We find that our model can exhibit a cognate effect, lending support to the cumulative frequency hypothesis. Further analyses reveal that the size of the effect in the model depends on its linguistic accuracy. We interpret our results within the literature on cognate processing.

Original languageEnglish
Pages2513-2519
Number of pages7
Publication statusPublished - 2021
Externally publishedYes
Event43rd Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society: Comparative Cognition: Animal Minds, CogSci 2021 - Virtual, Online, Austria
Duration: 26-Jul-202129-Jul-2021

Conference

Conference43rd Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society: Comparative Cognition: Animal Minds, CogSci 2021
Country/TerritoryAustria
CityVirtual, Online
Period26/07/202129/07/2021

Keywords

  • bilingualism
  • cognate facilitation effect
  • cumulative frequency
  • language model
  • sentence processing

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