Vertical and horizontal transmission in language evolution

It has been observed that borrowing within a group of genetically related languages often causes the lexical similarities among them to be skewed. Consequently, it has been proposed that borrowing can sometimes be inferred from such skewing. However, heterogeneity in the rate of lexical replacement,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Transactions of the Philological Society 2005-08, Vol.103 (2), p.121-146
Hauptverfasser: Wang, William S-Y., Minett, James W.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:It has been observed that borrowing within a group of genetically related languages often causes the lexical similarities among them to be skewed. Consequently, it has been proposed that borrowing can sometimes be inferred from such skewing. However, heterogeneity in the rate of lexical replacement, as well as borrowing from other languages, can also give rise to skewed lexical similarities. It is important, therefore, to determine to what degree skewing is a statistically significant indicator of borrowing. Here, we describe a statistical hypothesis test for detecting language contact based on skewing of linguistic characters of arbitrary type. Significant probabilities of correct detection of contact are maintained for various contact scenarios, with low false alarm probability. Our experiments show that the test is fairly robust to substantial heterogeneity in the retention rate, both across characters & across lineages, suggesting that the method can provide an objective criterion against which claims of significant skewing due to contact can be tested, pointing the way for more detailed analysis. 8 Tables, 5 Figures, 28 References. Adapted from the source document
ISSN:0079-1636
1467-968X
DOI:10.1111/j.1467-968X.2005.00147.x