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Main Authors: Tsipidi, Eleftheria, Nowak, Franz, Cotterell, Ryan, Wilcox, Ethan, Giulianelli, Mario, Warstadt, Alex
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.16062
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author Tsipidi, Eleftheria
Nowak, Franz
Cotterell, Ryan
Wilcox, Ethan
Giulianelli, Mario
Warstadt, Alex
author_facet Tsipidi, Eleftheria
Nowak, Franz
Cotterell, Ryan
Wilcox, Ethan
Giulianelli, Mario
Warstadt, Alex
contents The Uniform Information Density (UID) hypothesis posits that speakers tend to distribute information evenly across linguistic units to achieve efficient communication. Of course, information rate in texts and discourses is not perfectly uniform. While these fluctuations can be viewed as theoretically uninteresting noise on top of a uniform target, another explanation is that UID is not the only functional pressure regulating information content in a language. Speakers may also seek to maintain interest, adhere to writing conventions, and build compelling arguments. In this paper, we propose one such functional pressure; namely that speakers modulate information rate based on location within a hierarchically-structured model of discourse. We term this the Structured Context Hypothesis and test it by predicting the surprisal contours of naturally occurring discourses extracted from large language models using predictors derived from discourse structure. We find that hierarchical predictors are significant predictors of a discourse's information contour and that deeply nested hierarchical predictors are more predictive than shallow ones. This work takes an initial step beyond UID to propose testable hypotheses for why the information rate fluctuates in predictable ways
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2410_16062
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Surprise! Uniform Information Density Isn't the Whole Story: Predicting Surprisal Contours in Long-form Discourse
Tsipidi, Eleftheria
Nowak, Franz
Cotterell, Ryan
Wilcox, Ethan
Giulianelli, Mario
Warstadt, Alex
Computation and Language
The Uniform Information Density (UID) hypothesis posits that speakers tend to distribute information evenly across linguistic units to achieve efficient communication. Of course, information rate in texts and discourses is not perfectly uniform. While these fluctuations can be viewed as theoretically uninteresting noise on top of a uniform target, another explanation is that UID is not the only functional pressure regulating information content in a language. Speakers may also seek to maintain interest, adhere to writing conventions, and build compelling arguments. In this paper, we propose one such functional pressure; namely that speakers modulate information rate based on location within a hierarchically-structured model of discourse. We term this the Structured Context Hypothesis and test it by predicting the surprisal contours of naturally occurring discourses extracted from large language models using predictors derived from discourse structure. We find that hierarchical predictors are significant predictors of a discourse's information contour and that deeply nested hierarchical predictors are more predictive than shallow ones. This work takes an initial step beyond UID to propose testable hypotheses for why the information rate fluctuates in predictable ways
title Surprise! Uniform Information Density Isn't the Whole Story: Predicting Surprisal Contours in Long-form Discourse
topic Computation and Language
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.16062