The computational revolution in linguistics

(Throughout this post, I have taken pains not to name any names. The beauty of subtweeting and other forms of subposting is that nobody knows for sure you’re the person being discussed unless you volunteer yourself. So, don’t.)

One of the more salient developments in linguistics as a discipline over the last two decades is the way in which computational knowledge has diffused into the field.1 20 years ago, there were but a handful of linguistics professors in North America who could perform elaborate corpus analyses, apply machine learning and statistical analysis, or extract acoustic measurements from an audio file. And, while it was in some ways quite robust, speech and language processing at the turn of the last century simply did not hold the same importance it does nowadays.

While some professors—including, to their credit, many of my mentors and colleagues—can be commended for having “skilled up” in the intervening years, this knowledge has, I am sad to say, mostly advanced one death (and subsequent tenure line renewal) at a time. This has negative consequences for linguistics students who want to train for or pivot to a career in the tech sector, since there are professors who were, in their time, computationally sophisticated, but lack the skills a rising computational linguist is expected to have mastered. In an era of contracting tenure rolls and other forms of casualization in the academy, this has the risk of pushing out legitimate, albeit staid, lines of linguistic inquiry in favor of areas favored by capitalists.2

Yet I believe that this upskilling has a lot to contribute to linguistics as a discipline. There are many core questions about language use, acquisition, variation, and change which are best answered with a computational simulation that forces us to be explicit about our assumptions, or a corpus study that tells us what people really said, or a statistical analysis that tells us whether our correlations are likely to be meaningful, or even a machine learning system that helps us rapidly label linguistic data.3 It is a boon to our field that linguists of any age can employ these tools when appropriate.

This is not to say that the transition has not been occasionally ugly. First, there are the occasional nasty turf wars over who exactly is a linguist.4 Secondly, the standards of quality for work in this area must be negotiated and imposed. While a syntax paper in NL&LT from even 30 years ago are easily readable today, the computational methods of even widely-praised paper from 15 or 20 years ago are, frankly, often quite sloppy. I have found it necessary to explain this to students who want to interact with this older work lest they lower their own methodological standards.

I discern at least a few common sloppy habits in this older computational work, focusing for the moment on computational cognitive models of linguistic behavior.

  1. If a proposed computational model is compared to some “baseline” or older model, this older model is usually an ancient associationist model from psychology. This older model naturally lacks much of the rich linguistic specifications of the proposed model, and naturally it fails to model the data. Deliberately picking a bad baseline is putting one’s finger on the scale.
  2. Comparison of different computational models is usually informal. One should instead use statistical model comparison methods.
  3. The dependent variable for modeling is often derived from poorly-designed human subjects experiments. The subjects in these experiments may be instructed to perform a task they are unlikely to be able to do consciously (i.e., the tasks are cognitively impenetrable). Unjustified assumptions about appropriate scales of measurement may have been made. Finally, the n‘s are often needlessly small. Computational cognitive models demand high-quality measures of the behaviors they’re meant to model.
  4. Once the proposed model has been shown better than the baseline, it is reified far beyond what the evidence suggests. Computational cognitive modeling can at most show that certain explicit assumptions are consistent with the observed data: they cannot establish much beyond that.

The statistician Andrew Gelman writes that scientific discourse sometimes proceeds as if earlier published work has additional claim to truth than later research that is critical of the original findings (which may or may not be published yet).5 Critical interpretation of this older computational work is increasingly called for, as our methodological standards continue to mature. I find reviewers (and literature-reviewers) overly deferential to prior work of dubious quality simply because of its priority.

Endnotes

  1. An under-appreciated element to this process is that it is is simply easier to do linguistically-relevant things with computers than it was 20 years prior. For this, one should thank Python and R, NumPy and Scikit-learn, and of course tools like Praat and Parselmouth.
  2. I happen to think college education should not be merely vocational training.
  3. I happen to think most of these questions can be answered with a cheap laptop,  and only a few require a CUDA-enabled GPU.
  4. I suspect this is mostly a response to the rapidly casualizing academy. Unfortunately, any question about whether we should be doing X in linguistics is misinterpreted as a question about whether people who do X deserve to have a job. This is a presupposition failure for me: I believe everyone deserves meaningful work, and that academic tenure is a model of labor relations that should be expanded beyond the academy.
  5. To free ourselves of this bias, Gelman proposes what he calls the time-reversal heuristic, in which one imagines the temporal order reversed (e.g., that the later failed replication is now the first published result on the matter) and then re-evaluates the evidence. When interacting with older computational work, similar  thinking is called for here.

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