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[lojban] Language evolution



----- Forwarded message from EvolverTCB@aol.com -----

Subject: Re: Pattern recognition
From: EvolverTCB@aol.com
To: sl4@sl4.org

Someone in this group suggested that it might be desirable to create a 
grammar so comprehensive that misunderstandings would no longer happen (at least 
that's how I remember it, and there have been too many new posts of late for me 
to recall which post it was). Seems this isn't possible.
I came across an interesting brief at <A HREF="www.nature.com">www.nature.com</A> relating to this 
subject. 

http://www.nature.com/nsu/030120/030120-3.html


In essence, a speaker prefers fewer words, a listener more, and all human 
tongues occupy a 'sweet spot' in the middle.


Language evolved in a leap

Conflicting needs may have driven rapid development of communication. 
22 January 2003 <A HREF="http://www.nature.com/nsu/profiles/aboutus.html#Ball";>PHILIP BALL </A>

Language probably leapt, not crept, from squeaks to Shakespeare, two 
physicists have calculated. Human communication, they propose, underwent a 'phase 
transition', like solid ice melting to liquid water.

The richness of human languages is a fine-tuned compromise between the needs 
of speakers and of listeners, explain Ramon Ferrer i Cancho and Ricard Sol? of 
the Universitat Pompeu Fabra in Barcelona. Just a slight imbalance of these 
demands prevents the exchange of complex information, they argue. 

So languages between those of present-day humans and the limited signalling 
of some animals cannot really exist. There must, at some point, have been a 
switch from rudimentary to sophisticated language.

This contrasts with some linguists' view that language evolution was a 
gradual affair in which new words accumulated steadily. 

Greek or grunt

A language that conveyed all information unambiguously, say Ferrer i Cancho 
and Sol?, would have a separate word for every thing, concept or action it 
referred to. Such a language would be formidably complicated for the speaker: the 
green of grass, for example, would be represented by a totally different word 
to the green of sea, an emerald or an oak leaf. But it would be ideal for the 
listener, who wouldn't have to work out any meanings from a word's context. 

Ideal for the speaker is a language of few words, where simple, short 
utterances serve many purposes. The extreme case is a language with a single sound 
that conveys everything that needs saying. Some might suggest that teenagers 
prefer this kind of minimal-effort tongue that forces others to figure out what 
their grunts actually mean. 

Ferrer i Cancho and Sol? have devised a mathematical model in which the cost 
of using a language depends on the balance between these conflicting 
preferences<A HREF="http://www.nature.com/nsu/030120/#b1";>1</A>. They calculate the properties of the lexicon that requires minimal effort 
for different degrees of compromise, from exhaustive vocabularies to one-word 
languages.

They find that the change from one extreme to the other does not happen 
smoothly. There is a jump in the amount of communication, from very little to 
near-perfect, at a certain value of the relative weightings of speaker and hearer 
preferences.

Human languages, say the duo, seem to sit right on this sudden change. When 
it happens, the frequency of word usages develops a distinctive mathematical 
form, called a power law. The power law disappears on either side of the 
communication jump.

It has been known since the 1940s that human languages do indeed show just 
this kind of statistical distribution of word usage - the social scientist 
George Kingsley Zipf spotted the power-law behaviour. But it has never been 
satisfactorily explained before, although Zipf himself speculated that it might 
represent some kind of "principle of least effort".

    
    
References

Ferrer i Cancho, R. & Sol?, R. V. Least effort and the origins of scaling in 
human language. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, published 
online, doi:10.1073/pnas.0335980100 (2003). <A HREF="http://www.nature.com/nsu/030120/%26#9;&#9;http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0335980100";>|Article|</A>   

? Nature News Service / Macmillan Magazines Ltd 2003

    
    
    
    


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