Litcius/Paper detail

Complexity/informativeness trade-off in the domain of indefinite pronouns

Milica Denić, Shane Steinert‐Threlkeld, Jakub Szymanik

2021Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory57 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The vocabulary of human languages has been argued to support efficient communication by optimizing the trade-off between complexity and informativeness (Kemp & Regier 2012). The argument has been based on cross-linguistic analyses of vocabulary in semantic domains of content words such as kinship, color, and number terms. The present work extends this analysis to a category of function words: indefinite pronouns (e.g. someone, anyone, no-one, cf. Haspelmath 2001). We build on previous work to establish the meaning space and featural make-up for indefinite pronouns, and show that indefinite pronoun systems across languages optimize the complexity/informativeness trade-off. This demonstrates that pressures for efficient communication shape both content and function word categories, thus tying in with the conclusions of recent work on quantifiers by Steinert-Threlkeld (2019). Furthermore, we argue that the trade-off may explain some of the universal properties of indefinite pronouns, thus reducing the explanatory load for linguistic theories.

Topics & Concepts

PronounLinguisticsPersonal pronounArgument (complex analysis)Computer scienceFunction (biology)VocabularyMeaning (existential)TyingSpace (punctuation)Domain (mathematical analysis)Natural language processingArtificial intelligencePsychologyMathematicsPhilosophyOperating systemChemistryBiologyPsychotherapistMathematical analysisEvolutionary biologyBiochemistryNatural Language Processing TechniquesLanguage and cultural evolutionLinguistics, Language Diversity, and Identity