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Role Of Neutral Evolution In Word Turnover During Centuries Of English Word Popularity

Author

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  • DAMIAN RUCK

    (School of Social and Community Medicine, University of Bristol, UK‡Hobby School of Public Affairs, University of Houston, USA)

  • R. ALEXANDER BENTLEY

    (#x2020;Anthropology Department, University of Tennessee, USA‡Hobby School of Public Affairs, University of Houston, USA)

  • ALBERTO ACERBI

    (#xA7;Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands)

  • PHILIP GARNETT

    (#xB6;York Management School, University of York, UK)

  • DANIEL J. HRUSCHKA

    (#x2225;School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Arizona State University, USA)

Abstract

Here, we test Neutral models against the evolution of English word frequency and vocabulary at the corpus scale, as recorded in annual word frequencies from three centuries of English language books. Against these data, we test both static and dynamic predictions of two neutral models, including the relation between corpus size and vocabulary size, frequency distributions, and turnover within those frequency distributions. Although a commonly used Neutral model fails to replicate all these emergent properties at once, we find that modified two-stage Neutral model does replicate the static and dynamic properties of the corpus data. This two-stage model is meant to represent a relatively small corpus of English books, analogous to a ‘canon’, sampled by an exponentially increasing corpus of books among the wider population of authors. More broadly, this model — a smaller neutral model within a larger neutral model — could represent more broadly those situations where mass attention is focused on a small subset of the cultural variants.

Suggested Citation

  • Damian Ruck & R. Alexander Bentley & Alberto Acerbi & Philip Garnett & Daniel J. Hruschka, 2017. "Role Of Neutral Evolution In Word Turnover During Centuries Of English Word Popularity," Advances in Complex Systems (ACS), World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd., vol. 20(06n07), pages 1-16, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:wsi:acsxxx:v:20:y:2017:i:06n07:n:s0219525917500126
    DOI: 10.1142/S0219525917500126
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    2. Folgert Karsdorp & Lauren Fonteyn, 2019. "Cultural entrenchment of folktales is encoded in language," Palgrave Communications, Palgrave Macmillan, vol. 5(1), pages 1-12, December.
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    4. Simon Carrignon & R. Alexander Bentley & Damian Ruck, 2019. "Modelling rapid online cultural transmission: evaluating neutral models on Twitter data with approximate Bayesian computation," Palgrave Communications, Palgrave Macmillan, vol. 5(1), pages 1-9, December.

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