By ScienceDaily, September 20, 2012
How do language families evolve over many thousands of years? How stable over time are structural features of languages?Researchers Dan Dediu and Stephen Levinson of the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics in Nijmegen introduced a new method using Bayesian phylogenetic approaches to analyse the evolution of structural features in more than 50 language families.
How do language families evolve over many thousands of years? How stable over time are structural features of languages?Researchers Dan Dediu and Stephen Levinson of the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics in Nijmegen introduced a new method using Bayesian phylogenetic approaches to analyse the evolution of structural features in more than 50 language families.
Their paper
'Abstract profiles of structural stability point to universal tendencies,
family-specific factors, and ancient connections between languages' will be
published online on Sept. 20 in PLoS ONE.
Language is one of
the best examples of a cultural evolutionary system. How vocabularies evolve
has been extensively studied, but researchers know relatively little about the
stability of structural properties of language -- pholonoly, morphology and
syntax. In their PLoS ONE paper, Dan Dediu (MPI's Language and Genetics
Department) and Stephen Levinson (director of MPI's Language and Cognition
Department) asked how stable over time the structural features of languages are
-- aspects like word order, the inventory of sounds, or plural marking of
nouns.
"If at least
some of them are relatively stable over long time periods, they promise a way
to get at ancient language relationships," the researchers state in their
paper. "But opinion has been divided, some researchers holding that
universally there is a hierarchy of stability for such features, others
claiming that individual language families show their own idiosyncrasies in
what features are stable and which not."
Ancient
relations between language families
Using a large
database and many alternative methods Dediu and Levinson show that both
positions are right: there are universal tendencies for some features to be
more stable than others, but individual language families have their own
distinctive profile. These distinctive profiles can then be used to probe ancient
relations between what are today independent language families.
"Using this
technique we find for instance probable connections between the languages of
the Americas and those of NE Eurasia, presumably dating back to the peopling of
the Americas 12,000 years or more ago," Levinson explains. "We also
find likely connections between most of the Eurasian language families,
presumably pre-dating the split off of Indo-European around 9000 years
ago."
Universal
tendencies and distinctive profiles
This work thus has
implications for our understanding of differential rates of language change,
and by identifying distinctive patterns of change it provides a new window into
very old historical processes that have shaped the linguistic map of the world.
It shows that there is no conflict between the existence of universal
tendencies and factors specific to a language family or geographic area. It
also makes the strong point that information about deep relationships between
languages is contained in abstract, higher-level properties derived from large
sets of structural features as opposed to just a few highly stable aspects of
language. In addition, this work introduces innovative quantitative techniques
for finding and testing the statistical reliability of both universal
tendencies and distinctive language-family profiles.
"Our
findings strongly support the existence of a universal tendency across language
families for some specific structural features to be intrinsically stable
across language families and geographic regions," Dediu concludes.
Story Source:
The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Max-Planck-Gesellschaft.Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.
Journal Reference:
- Dan Dediu, Stephen C. Levinson. Abstract Profiles of Structural Stability Point to Universal Tendencies, Family-Specific Factors, and Ancient Connections between Languages. PLoS ONE, 2012; 7 (9): e45198 DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0045198
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