The Evolution of the Exponent of Zipf's Law in Language Ontogeny
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/6103Dato
2013Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
It is well-known that word frequencies arrange themselves according to Zipf’s law. However, little is known about the
dependency of the parameters of the law and the complexity of a communication system. Many models of the evolution of
language assume that the exponent of the law remains constant as the complexity of a communication systems increases.
Using longitudinal studies of child language, we analysed the word rank distribution for the speech of children and adults
participating in conversations. The adults typically included family members (e.g., parents) or the investigators conducting
the research. Our analysis of the evolution of Zipf’s law yields two main unexpected results. First, in children the exponent of
the law tends to decrease over time while this tendency is weaker in adults, thus suggesting this is not a mere mirror effect
of adult speech. Second, although the exponent of the law is more stable in adults, their exponents fall below 1 which is the
typical value of the exponent assumed in both children and adults. Our analysis also shows a tendency of the mean length
of utterances (MLU), a simple estimate of syntactic complexity, to increase as the exponent decreases. The parallel evolution
of the exponent and a simple indicator of syntactic complexity (MLU) supports the hypothesis that the exponent of Zipf’s
law and linguistic complexity are inter-related. The assumption that Zipf’s law for word ranks is a power-law with a constant
exponent of one in both adults and children needs to be revised.
Forlag
Public Library of Science (PLoS)Sitering
PLoS ONE (2013), vol. 8(3): e53227.Metadata
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