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Generalising to German Plural Noun Classes, from the Perspective of a Recurrent Neural Network

Verna Dankers, Anna Langedijk, Kate McCurdy, Adina Williams, Dieuwke Hupkes

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Abstract

Inflectional morphology has since long been a useful testing ground for broader questions about generalisation in language and the viability of neural network models as cognitive models of language. Here, in line with that tradition, we explore how recurrent neural networks acquire the complex German plural system and reflect upon how their strategy compares to human generalisation and rule-based models of this system. We perform analyses including behavioural experiments, diagnostic classification, representation analysis and causal interventions, suggesting that the models rely on features that are also key predictors in rule-based models of German plurals. However, the models also display shortcut learning, which is crucial to overcome in search of more cognitively plausible generalisation behaviour.

Topics & Concepts

PluralGermanComputer scienceArtificial intelligencePerspective (graphical)Artificial neural networkNatural language processingRepresentation (politics)CognitionNounRecurrent neural networkKey (lock)Machine learningLinguisticsPsychologyPolitical sciencePoliticsLawNeuroscienceComputer securityPhilosophyNatural Language Processing TechniquesSyntax, Semantics, Linguistic VariationLanguage and cultural evolution
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