{"pk":49821,"title":"For GPT-4 as with Humans:  Information Structure Predicts Acceptability of Long-Distance Dependencies","subtitle":null,"abstract":"It remains debated how well any LM is able to understand natural language or even generate reliable metalinguistic judgments. Moreover, relatively little work has demonstrated that LMs can represent and respect subtle relationships between form and function proposed by linguists. We here focus on a particular such relationship established in recent work: English speakers' judgments about the information structure of canonical sentences predicts independently collected acceptability ratings  on corresponding \"long distance dependency\" (LDD) constructions, across a wide array of base constructions and multiple types of LDDs.  To determine whether any LM captures this relationship, we probe GPT-4 on the same tasks used with humans and new extensions. Results reveal reliable metalinguistic skill on the information structure and acceptability tasks, replicating a striking interaction between the two, despite the 0-shot, explicit nature of the tasks, and little to no chance of contamination (Studies 1a, 1b). Study 2 manipulates the information structure of base sentences and confirms a causal relationship: increasing the prominence of a constituent in a context sentence increases the subsequent acceptability ratings on  an LDD construction. The findings suggest a tight relationship between natural and GPT-4-generated English, and between information structure and syntax, which begs for further exploration.","language":"eng","license":{"name":"","short_name":"","text":null,"url":""},"keywords":[{"word":"Artificial Intelligence; Linguistics; Psychology; Discourse; Natural Language Processing; Pragmatics"}],"section":"Papers with Poster Presentation","is_remote":true,"remote_url":"https://escholarship.org/uc/item/6rk7s243","frozenauthors":[{"first_name":"Nicole","middle_name":"","last_name":"Cuneo","name_suffix":"","institution":"Princeton University","department":""},{"first_name":"Nora","middle_name":"","last_name":"Graves","name_suffix":"","institution":"Princeton University","department":""},{"first_name":"Supantho","middle_name":"","last_name":"Rakshit","name_suffix":"","institution":"Princeton University","department":""},{"first_name":"Adele","middle_name":"","last_name":"Goldberg","name_suffix":"","institution":"Princeton University","department":""}],"date_submitted":null,"date_accepted":null,"date_published":"2025-01-01T18:00:00Z","render_galley":null,"galleys":[{"label":"PDF","type":"pdf","path":"https://journalpub.escholarship.org/cognitivesciencesociety/article/49821/galley/37783/download/"}]}