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Baniwa classifiers as predictors of upcoming nouns

Cronhamn, Sandra LU orcid ; Hjortdal, Anna LU ; da Silva, Franklin and Roll, Mikael LU (2025) In Linguistic Typology
Abstract
Theories of predictive processing postulate that the brain continuously generates predictions about future linguistic input. Many different linguistic elements have been found to function as predictive cues. One such element is classifiers, i.e., morphemes that classify noun referents according to some semantic property. However, very few studies have so far investigated the predictive function of classifiers, and all existing studies focus on major East Asian languages. The present study investigates whether listeners use classifiers as cues to following nouns in Baniwa (Arawakan, Northwestern Amazonia). Baniwa has a system of 53 classifiers that primarily encode physical shape. In a response time experiment, participants heard... (More)
Theories of predictive processing postulate that the brain continuously generates predictions about future linguistic input. Many different linguistic elements have been found to function as predictive cues. One such element is classifiers, i.e., morphemes that classify noun referents according to some semantic property. However, very few studies have so far investigated the predictive function of classifiers, and all existing studies focus on major East Asian languages. The present study investigates whether listeners use classifiers as cues to following nouns in Baniwa (Arawakan, Northwestern Amazonia). Baniwa has a system of 53 classifiers that primarily encode physical shape. In a response time experiment, participants heard numeral-classifier-noun phrases and had to choose which one of two images depicted the noun. We tested two variables: informativity and degree of constraint. With respect to informativity, we found that response times were faster when the classifier could be used to identify the target image. With regard to degree of constraint, classifiers denoting shape yielded faster response times compared to the generic classifier. The results show that classifiers have a predictive function in Baniwa, and, by contributing data from a previously unexplored language family and geographical region, suggest that prediction may be a function of classifiers cross-linguistically. (Less)
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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
epub
subject
keywords
Arawakan languages, nominal classification, pre-activation, predictive processing, psycholinguistics, Baniwa
in
Linguistic Typology
pages
30 pages
publisher
Mouton de Gruyter
external identifiers
  • scopus:105025536801
ISSN
1430-0532
DOI
10.1515/lingty-2025-0026
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
887c8422-852b-4625-9b85-07a5bba1a03a
date added to LUP
2026-01-08 17:30:38
date last changed
2026-01-15 14:13:26
@article{887c8422-852b-4625-9b85-07a5bba1a03a,
  abstract     = {{Theories of predictive processing postulate that the brain continuously generates predictions about future linguistic input. Many different linguistic elements have been found to function as predictive cues. One such element is classifiers, i.e., morphemes that classify noun referents according to some semantic property. However, very few studies have so far investigated the predictive function of classifiers, and all existing studies focus on major East Asian languages. The present study investigates whether listeners use classifiers as cues to following nouns in Baniwa (Arawakan, Northwestern Amazonia). Baniwa has a system of 53 classifiers that primarily encode physical shape. In a response time experiment, participants heard numeral-classifier-noun phrases and had to choose which one of two images depicted the noun. We tested two variables: informativity and degree of constraint. With respect to informativity, we found that response times were faster when the classifier could be used to identify the target image. With regard to degree of constraint, classifiers denoting shape yielded faster response times compared to the generic classifier. The results show that classifiers have a predictive function in Baniwa, and, by contributing data from a previously unexplored language family and geographical region, suggest that prediction may be a function of classifiers cross-linguistically.}},
  author       = {{Cronhamn, Sandra and Hjortdal, Anna and da Silva, Franklin and Roll, Mikael}},
  issn         = {{1430-0532}},
  keywords     = {{Arawakan languages; nominal classification; pre-activation; predictive processing; psycholinguistics; Baniwa}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Mouton de Gruyter}},
  series       = {{Linguistic Typology}},
  title        = {{Baniwa classifiers as predictors of upcoming nouns}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/lingty-2025-0026}},
  doi          = {{10.1515/lingty-2025-0026}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}