Challenges in detecting evolutionary forces in language change using diachronic corpora

Newberry et al. (Detecting evolutionary forces in language change, 'Nature' 551, 2017) tackle an important but difficult problem in linguistics, the testing of selective theories of language change against a null model of drift. Having applied a test from population genetics (the Frequency...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Andres Karjus, Richard A. Blythe, Simon Kirby, Kenny Smith
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2020-05-01
Series:Glossa
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/909
Description
Summary:Newberry et al. (Detecting evolutionary forces in language change, 'Nature' 551, 2017) tackle an important but difficult problem in linguistics, the testing of selective theories of language change against a null model of drift. Having applied a test from population genetics (the Frequency Increment Test) to a number of relevant examples, they suggest stochasticity has a previously under-appreciated role in language evolution. We replicate their results and find that while the overall observation holds, results produced by this approach on individual time series can be sensitive to how the corpus is organized into temporal segments (binning). Furthermore, we use a large set of simulations in conjunction with binning to systematically explore the range of applicability of the Frequency Increment Test. We conclude that care should be exercised with interpreting results of tests like the Frequency Increment Test on individual series, given the researcher degrees of freedom available when applying the test to corpus data, and fundamental differences between genetic and linguistic data. Our findings have implications for selection testing and temporal binning in general, as well as demonstrating the usefulness of simulations for evaluating methods newly introduced to the field.
ISSN:2397-1835