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Diversity, competition, extinction: the ecophysics of language change

期刊

JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY INTERFACE
卷 7, 期 53, 页码 1647-1664

出版社

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2010.0110

关键词

language dynamics; extinction; diversity; competition; phase transitions

资金

  1. NWO
  2. Spanish MCIN Theoretical Linguistics [2009SGR1079]
  3. James S. McDonnell Foundation
  4. Santa Fe Institute (RS)
  5. ICREA Funding Source: Custom

向作者/读者索取更多资源

As indicated early by Charles Darwin, languages behave and change very much like living species. They display high diversity, differentiate in space and time, emerge and disappear. A large body of literature has explored the role of information exchanges and communicative constraints in groups of agents under selective scenarios. These models have been very helpful in providing a rationale on how complex forms of communication emerge under evolutionary pressures. However, other patterns of large-scale organization can be described using mathematical methods ignoring communicative traits. These approaches consider shorter time scales and have been developed by exploiting both theoretical ecology and statistical physics methods. The models are reviewed here and include extinction, invasion, origination, spatial organization, coexistence and diversity as key concepts and are very simple in their defining rules. Such simplicity is used in order to catch the most fundamental laws of organization and those universal ingredients responsible for qualitative traits. The similarities between observed and predicted patterns indicate that an ecological theory of language is emerging, supporting (on a quantitative basis) its ecological nature, although key differences are also present. Here, we critically review some recent advances and outline their implications and limitations as well as highlight problems for future research.

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