Litcius/Paper detail

Phonotactic Complexity and Its Trade-offs

Tiago Pimentel, Brian Roark, Ryan Cotterell

2020Repository for Publications and Research Data (ETH Zurich)55 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We present methods for calculating a measure of phonotactic complexity—bits per phoneme— that permits a straightforward cross-linguistic comparison. When given a word, represented as a sequence of phonemic segments such as symbols in the international phonetic alphabet, and a statistical model trained on a sample of word types from the language, we can approximately measure bits per phoneme using the negative log-probability of that word under the model. This simple measure allows us to compare the entropy across languages, giving insight into how complex a language’s phonotactics is. Using a collection of 1016 basic concept words across 106 languages, we demonstrate a very strong negative correlation of − 0.74 between bits per phoneme and the average length of words.

Topics & Concepts

PhonotacticsComputer scienceWord (group theory)Measure (data warehouse)AlphabetNatural language processingSpeech recognitionArtificial intelligenceEntropy (arrow of time)Language modelPhonologyLinguisticsData miningPhysicsPhilosophyQuantum mechanicsNatural Language Processing TechniquesLanguage and cultural evolutionAuthorship Attribution and Profiling