Martinez Del Rio Aurora, Ferrara Casey, Kim Sanghee J, Hakgüder Emre, Brentari Diane
Department of Linguistics, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States.
Department of Psychology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States.
Front Psychol. 2022 Mar 16;13:806471. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.806471. eCollection 2022.
Over the history of research on sign languages, much scholarship has highlighted the pervasive presence of signs whose forms relate to their meaning in a non-arbitrary way. The presence of these forms suggests that sign language vocabularies are shaped, at least in part, by a pressure toward maintaining a link between form and meaning in wordforms. We use a vector space approach to test the ways this pressure might shape sign language vocabularies, examining how non-arbitrary forms are distributed within the lexicons of two unrelated sign languages. Vector space models situate the representations of words in a multi-dimensional space where the distance between words indexes their relatedness in meaning. Using phonological information from the vocabularies of American Sign Language (ASL) and British Sign Language (BSL), we tested whether increased similarity between the semantic representations of signs corresponds to increased phonological similarity. The results of the computational analysis showed a significant positive relationship between phonological form and semantic meaning for both sign languages, which was strongest when the sign language lexicons were organized into clusters of semantically related signs. The analysis also revealed variation in the strength of patterns across the form-meaning relationships seen between phonological parameters within each sign language, as well as between the two languages. This shows that while the connection between form and meaning is not entirely language specific, there are cross-linguistic differences in how these mappings are realized for signs in each language, suggesting that arbitrariness as well as cognitive or cultural influences may play a role in how these patterns are realized. The results of this analysis not only contribute to our understanding of the distribution of non-arbitrariness in sign language lexicons, but also demonstrate a new way that computational modeling can be harnessed in lexicon-wide investigations of sign languages.
在手语研究的历史中,许多学术成果都强调了这样一种普遍存在的现象:有些手语的形式与它们的意义以非任意的方式相关联。这些形式的存在表明,手语词汇至少在一定程度上受到一种压力的影响,这种压力促使在词形中保持形式与意义之间的联系。我们使用向量空间方法来测试这种压力可能塑造手语词汇的方式,研究非任意形式在两种不相关手语的词汇表中是如何分布的。向量空间模型将单词的表示置于一个多维空间中,其中单词之间的距离标示出它们在意义上的相关性。利用美国手语(ASL)和英国手语(BSL)词汇表中的语音信息,我们测试了手语语义表示之间相似度的增加是否对应于语音相似度的增加。计算分析结果表明,两种手语的语音形式和语义之间都存在显著的正相关关系,当手语词汇按照语义相关的群组进行组织时,这种关系最为强烈。分析还揭示了每种手语内部以及两种手语之间语音参数所呈现的形式 - 意义关系模式强度的差异。这表明,虽然形式与意义之间的联系并非完全特定于某一种语言,但在每种语言中这些映射如何在手语中实现存在跨语言差异,这表明任意性以及认知或文化影响可能在这些模式的实现方式中发挥作用。这一分析结果不仅有助于我们理解手语词汇中非任意性的分布情况,还展示了一种新的方式,即计算建模可用于手语词汇范围的研究。