Optimal Categorisation

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Optimal Categorisation
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Optimal Categorisation: the origin and nature of gender from a psycholinguistic perspective.

Grammatical gender is perplexing concept that has raised an abundance of questions around its origin, impact and the classification of entities in various languages. With the primary question being: Why are there so many different categorisation systems?

People

Learn more about members of the project, including:

Researchers

Stakeholders

Consultants

Languages

With the objective to investigate the formation and development of gender in language and its interplay with cognition, six interconnected languages have been selected with distinctive possessive classifier systems. The sample of Oceanic languages encompass those spoken in Vanuatu and New Caledonia.

Experiments

To further comprehend the nature and origin of grammatical gender six psycholinguistic experiments have been developed. These experiments investigate classifier systems within the six oceanic languages, collecting data to investigate our hypotheses.

Outreach

Using our data, with the support of local stakeholders, we are creating vital vernacular literacy materials to help support these endangered languages. We are also interacting with the public to share, explain, and teach about these remarkable varieties of nominal categorisation.

 

Publications

Our team has published several papers as a result of our research, with other papers being written and reviewed.

Talks

Our researchers have given a number of talks as part of our outreach efforts to share the project findings.

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Publications

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The Agreement Hierarchy and (generalized) semantic agreement
2023
The typology of external splits
2023
The Agreement Hierarchy revisited: the typology of controllers
2022
Implementing free-listing: possessive classifiers in Oceanic
2022
Optimal Categorisation: The Nature of Nominal Classification Systems
2021
Uncovering variation in classifier assignment in Oceanic
2021
Pluralia tantum nouns and the theory of features: a typology of nouns with non-canonical number properties
2019
Extreme classification
2018
Pluralia tantum nouns in the Slavonic languages
2018
New approaches to the typology of gender
2018
Non-Canonical Gender Systems
2018
North Ambrym possessive classifiers from the perspective of canonical gender
2018
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