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Knowledge Exchange 2023 (Hong Kong Sign Language) Lab News

Students complete Immersive Lessons on Hong Kong Sign Language

Over the past five months, from January to May 2023, Rachel, Jasper, Tiffany, and Kevin have successfully completed a 24-hour immersive course in Hong Kong Sign Language (HKSL), as part of an ongoing research investigation into Hong Kong Sign Language, conducted by Youngah and Arthur of the Language Development Lab.

Throughout the course, the students engaged in twice-per-week, one-on-one immersive sessions with Ms. KONG Wan Ki (KK), a senior trainer from the Professional Sign Language Centre. With their trainer unable to hear, the students were required to use HKSL, supplemented with writing tools, to communicate, thereby fostering a comprehensive understanding of the language.

Upon completing the course, the students achieved Level III proficiency in the Centre’s curriculum, which is recognized by the Hong Kong Sign Language Association. In total, they have acquired 655 individual signs in Hong Kong Sign Language.

We would like to acknowledge the remarkable efforts of Rachel, Jasper, Tiffany, and Kevin, and express our gratitude to KK and the Professional Sign Language Centre for their invaluable support throughout the course. Their commitment and diligence have significantly contributed to the progress of our research.

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Presenting at the HISPhonCog2023 @ Seoul

Our lab members will present their recent work at the upcoming Hanyang International Symposium on Phonetics and Cognitive Sciences of Language 2023 (HISPhonCog2023) in Seoul!

Jon, Ming, Ivy and Jonah will present “downloadAudiovisual enhancement in clear speech production of English laterals.” It looks at the production of laterals and other coronal consonants in normal and listener-oriented clear speech. The study involved 18 adult native English speakers who participated in a two-part speech production experiment. The findings suggest that listener-oriented speech does not necessarily prioritize auditory perceptibility. Instead, speakers may choose to provide listeners with direct visual cues of a segment’s articulatory/gestural properties, consistent with the inherently multimodal nature of speech perception.

Frank and Youngah will present “downloadBottom-up learning of a phonetic system using an autoencoder“. The study explores the ability of a machine learning model to learn a phonetic system from contextless acoustic input. The autoencoder model was trained on recordings from English and Mandarin speakers and proved successful in capturing the phonetic system of both languages. The study suggests that infants’ phonetic knowledge may not be innate but can be acquired based purely on acoustic information, without relying on language-specific learning facilities. However, the model could not reach phonological knowledge without training on phonological cues, highlighting the indispensable role of phonological information in refining learners’ knowledge on phonetics and phonology.

Changhe and Jon will present “downloadNasality and Nasal Excrescence of the Nasal Vowels in Shanghai Chinese“. It examines the acoustic and articulatory configuration of the Shanghainese nasal vowels. The study analyzed data from six native speakers of Shanghainese and found that the nasal vowels show little nasalization in the first fifth of their duration and steadily increasing nasality thereafter. The findings suggest that the Shanghainese nasal vowels are only partially nasalized, with no clear relationship between the proportion of vowel nasality and duration or presence of the nasal consonant.

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AMP2022: Transmission of Vowel Dis/harmony

Bingzi and Youngah’s study “The Transmission of Vowel Harmony and Vowel Disharmony: An Iterated Learning Study,” has recently been presented at the 2022 Annual Meeting on Phonology. The paper explores the role of a cognitive predisposition known as the substantive bias in the acquisition and transmission of phonological patterns, focusing on the asymmetry between vowel harmony and disharmony, two phonological patterns that differ in their phonetic motivation and frequency in natural languages.

Previous research has shown that learners may better acquire certain patterns over others due to their cognitive predispositions, known as inductive biases. Structural bias refers to the preference towards simpler patterns, while substantive bias refers to the tendency to more readily acquire phonetically motivated patterns. While the effect of the substantive bias on phonological learning has not always been detected, studies have constantly provided evidence for the structural bias.

The paper aims to explore the role of substantive bias during the course of language transmission. The authors used the iterated learning paradigm, which involves one or multiple participants representing one generation, who are asked to learn and replicate the target behavior from the predecessor. The output of a generation is used as the input for the next generation, and the learning procedure stays the same for every iteration. The experiment contained two conditions, the natural condition where participants learned vowel harmony patterns and the unnatural condition exhibiting vowel disharmony patterns.

The results showed no general difference between the diachronic changes of vowel harmony and vowel disharmony, indicating that both patterns are equally able to survive through long-term transmission. The experiment results are not in alignment with typological data, on which the authors noted that it might be due to the design of the transmission chain, which relied solely on learning from a single participant in each generation. The authors suggest that future work may involve interaction into the experimental paradigm to explore other potential mechanisms through which the substantive bias influences phonological transmission.

The findings suggest that while the substantive bias may play a role in phonological learning, it may not have a significant impact on language change through iterated learning, at least at the population level.

Yu, B., & Do, Y. (2023). The Transmission of Vowel Harmony and Vowel Disharmony: An Iterated Learning Study. Proceedings of the Annual Meetings on Phonology, 10, Article 0. https://doi.org/10.3765/amp.v10i0.5439

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ABB prototype of collocate–ideophone constructions in Mandarin Chinese : CogL

Thomas’s paper on the ABB prototype of collocate-ideophone constructions in Mandarin Chinese is now published on Cognitive Linguistics!

Van Hoey, T. (2023). ABB, a salient prototype of collocate–ideophone constructions in Mandarin Chinese. Cognitive Linguistics. open_in_new DOI file_download PDF

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Bingzi accepted to the MIT PhD programme!

Bingzi is accepted to the PhD programme at MIT. Congratulations! A celebratory lunch was certainly in order.

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Lab News Publication

“Iconicity in Ideophones: Guessing, Memorizing, and Reassessing” : accepted at CogSci!

Van Hoey, T., Thompson, A. L., Do, Y., & Dingemanse, M. (2023). Iconicity in Ideophones: Guessing, Memorizing, and Reassessing. Cognitive Science. Accepted open_in_new DOI

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“Transmission of vowel (dis)harmony” AMP2022 @ UCLA

Bingzi presented at the 2022 Annual Meeting on Phonology at University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). Her work with Youngah reports the findings of an iterative study on the transmission of vowel (dis)harmony.

Yu, Bingzi, & Do, Youngah. (2022). The transmission of vowel (dis)harmony: an iterated learning study. The 2022 Annual Meeting on Phonology. Los Angeles: University of California, Los Angeles.

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“When memory fails, just guess” accepted at DGfS 2023 @ Köln

Thomas, Youngah and Arthur’s project with M. Dingemanse has been accepted at 45th Annual conference of the German Linguistic Society, to be held at the University of Cologne.

Do, Youngah, Thompson, Arthur L., Van Hoey, Thomas G. R., & Dingemanse, Mark. (2023, March 8). Iconicity in ideophones: When memory fails, just guess. The 45th Annual Meeting of the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Sprachwissenschaft, Köln: The University of Cologne. http://hub.hku.hk/handle/10722/320988

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Lab News Publication

“Structural Markedness and Depiction” accepted by The Mental Lexicon

Arthur, May, Ping Hei (Felix) and Youngah’s paper has been accepted by the Mental Lexicon!

Thompson, Arthur L., Chan, May Pik Yu, Yeung, Ping Hei, & Do, Youngah. (2022). Structural markedness and depiction: The case of lower sequential predictability in Cantonese ideophones. The Mental Lexicon.

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Welcome to our new postgraduate students!

LDL welcomes three new postgraduate students in this semester: Ivy, Ming and Zhihao. Welcome! They will get involved in several lab projects, including perception and production studies.