Measuring the Functional Load of Phonological Contrasts
Dinoj Surendran, Partha Niyogi

TL;DR
This paper introduces a generalized set of measures for quantifying the functional load of various phonological contrasts across languages, with applications in linguistics and speech recognition.
Contribution
It extends previous measures to include multiple types of phonological contrasts and tests their robustness across different corpora and languages.
Findings
Measures are robust across different corpora.
Applicable to diverse languages including Cantonese, Dutch, English, German, and Mandarin.
Useful for historical linguistics, language acquisition, and speech recognition.
Abstract
Frequency counts are a measure of how much use a language makes of a linguistic unit, such as a phoneme or word. However, what is often important is not the units themselves, but the contrasts between them. A measure is therefore needed for how much use a language makes of a contrast, i.e. the functional load (FL) of the contrast. We generalize previous work in linguistics and speech recognition and propose a family of measures for the FL of several phonological contrasts, including phonemic oppositions, distinctive features, suprasegmentals, and phonological rules. We then test it for robustness to changes of corpora. Finally, we provide examples in Cantonese, Dutch, English, German and Mandarin, in the context of historical linguistics, language acquisition and speech recognition. More information can be found at http://dinoj.info/research/fload
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Taxonomy
TopicsNatural Language Processing Techniques · Phonetics and Phonology Research · Speech Recognition and Synthesis
