CLDec 6, 2023

Revisiting the Optimality of Word Lengths

Cambridge
arXiv:2312.03897v1132 citationsh-index: 26EMNLP
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses a foundational issue in linguistics and cognitive science by challenging recent theories on communicative efficiency, but it is incremental as it refines existing hypotheses rather than introducing a new paradigm.

The paper tackled the problem of determining the optimality of word lengths in language by revisiting Zipf's hypothesis and the channel capacity hypothesis, finding that word lengths are better predicted by frequency than by surprisal-based measures across 13 languages.

Zipf (1935) posited that wordforms are optimized to minimize utterances' communicative costs. Under the assumption that cost is given by an utterance's length, he supported this claim by showing that words' lengths are inversely correlated with their frequencies. Communicative cost, however, can be operationalized in different ways. Piantadosi et al. (2011) claim that cost should be measured as the distance between an utterance's information rate and channel capacity, which we dub the channel capacity hypothesis (CCH) here. Following this logic, they then proposed that a word's length should be proportional to the expected value of its surprisal (negative log-probability in context). In this work, we show that Piantadosi et al.'s derivation does not minimize CCH's cost, but rather a lower bound, which we term CCH-lower. We propose a novel derivation, suggesting an improved way to minimize CCH's cost. Under this method, we find that a language's word lengths should instead be proportional to the surprisal's expectation plus its variance-to-mean ratio. Experimentally, we compare these three communicative cost functions: Zipf's, CCH-lower , and CCH. Across 13 languages and several experimental settings, we find that length is better predicted by frequency than either of the other hypotheses. In fact, when surprisal's expectation, or expectation plus variance-to-mean ratio, is estimated using better language models, it leads to worse word length predictions. We take these results as evidence that Zipf's longstanding hypothesis holds.

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