On Pronoun Prediction in the L2 Neural Language Model

In recent years, artificial neural(-network) language models (LMs) have achieved remarkable success in tasks involving sentence processing. However, despite leveraging the advantages of pre-trained neural LMs, our understanding of the specific syntactic knowledge acquired by these models during proc...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inKorea Journal of English Language and Linguistics Vol. 23; pp. 482 - 497
Main Authors Choi, Sunjoo, Park, Myung-Kwan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 한국영어학회 2023
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ISSN1598-1398
2586-7474
DOI10.15738/kjell.23..202306.482

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Summary:In recent years, artificial neural(-network) language models (LMs) have achieved remarkable success in tasks involving sentence processing. However, despite leveraging the advantages of pre-trained neural LMs, our understanding of the specific syntactic knowledge acquired by these models during processing remains limited. This study aims to investigate whether L2 neural LMs trained on L2 English leaners’ textbooks can acquire syntactic knowledge similar to that of humans. Specifically, we examine the L2 LM’s ability to predict pronouns within the framework of previous experiments conducted with L1 humans and L1 LMs. Our focus is on pronominal coreference, a well-studied linguistic phenomenon in psycholinguistics that has been extensively investigated. This research expands on existing studies by exploring whether the L2 LM can learn Binding Condition B, a fundamental aspect of pronominal agreement. We replicate several previous experiments and examine the L2 LM’s capacity to exhibit human-like behavior in pronominal agreement effects. Consistent with the findings of Davis (2022), we provide further evidence that, like L1 LMs, the L2 LM fails to fully capture the range of behaviors associated with Binding Condition B, in comparison to L1 humans. Overall, neural LMs face challenges in recognizing the complete spectrum of Binding Condition B and are limited to capturing aspects of it only in specific contexts. KCI Citation Count: 1
ISSN:1598-1398
2586-7474
DOI:10.15738/kjell.23..202306.482