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Learning inflection classes using Adaptive Resonance Theory

Published: December 17, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2512.15551v1

By: Peter Dekker, Heikki Rasilo, Bart de Boer

Potential Business Impact:

Teaches computers how words change form.

Business Areas:
Natural Language Processing Artificial Intelligence, Data and Analytics, Software

The concept of inflection classes is an abstraction used by linguists, and provides a means to describe patterns in languages that give an analogical base for deducing previously unencountered forms. This ability is an important part of morphological acquisition and processing. We study the learnability of a system of verbal inflection classes by the individual language user by performing unsupervised clustering of lexemes into inflection classes. As a cognitively plausible and interpretable computational model, we use Adaptive Resonance Theory, a neural network with a parameter that determines the degree of generalisation (vigilance). The model is applied to Latin, Portuguese and Estonian. The similarity of clustering to attested inflection classes varies depending on the complexity of the inflectional system. We find the best performance in a narrow region of the generalisation parameter. The learned features extracted from the model show similarity with linguistic descriptions of the inflection classes. The proposed model could be used to study change in inflection classes in the future, by including it in an agent-based model.

Country of Origin
🇧🇪 Belgium

Repos / Data Links

Page Count
38 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Computation and Language