Sera Maria D, Elieff Chryle, Forbes James, Burch Melissa Clark, Rodríguez Wanda, Dubois Diane Poulin
Institute of Child Development, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 55455, USA.
J Exp Psychol Gen. 2002 Sep;131(3):377-97.
The focus of this work was on the relation between grammatical gender and categorization. In one set of studies, monolingual English-, Spanish-, French-, and German-speaking children and adults assigned male and female voices to inanimate objects. Results from Spanish and French speakers indicated effects of grammatical gender on classification; results from German speakers did not. A connectionist model simulated the contradicting findings. The connectionist networks were also used to investigate which aspect of grammatical gender was responsible for the different pattern of findings. The predictions from the connectionist simulations were supported by the results from an artificial language-learning task. The results from this work demonstrate how connectionist networks can be used to identify the differences between languages that affect categorization.
这项工作的重点是语法性与分类之间的关系。在一组研究中,以英语、西班牙语、法语和德语为母语的儿童及成人将男性和女性的声音赋予无生命物体。说西班牙语和法语的人的结果表明语法性对分类有影响;说德语的人的结果则不然。一个联结主义模型模拟了这些相互矛盾的发现。联结主义网络还被用于研究语法性的哪个方面导致了不同的结果模式。人工语言学习任务的结果支持了联结主义模拟的预测。这项工作的结果表明了联结主义网络如何能够用于识别影响分类的不同语言之间的差异。