Crosslinguistic word order variation reflects evolutionary pressures of dependency and information locality

Author:

Hahn Michael12,Xu Yang3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Linguistics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305

2. Collaborative Research Center 1102, Saarland University, 66041 Saarbrücken, Germany

3. Department of Computer Science, Cognitive Science Program, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 3G8, Canada

Abstract

Languages vary considerably in syntactic structure. About 40% of the world’s languages have subject–verb–object order, and about 40% have subject–object–verb order. Extensive work has sought to explain this word order variation across languages. However, the existing approaches are not able to explain coherently the frequency distribution and evolution of word order in individual languages. We propose that variation in word order reflects different ways of balancing competing pressures of dependency locality and information locality, whereby languages favor placing elements together when they are syntactically related or contextually informative about each other. Using data from 80 languages in 17 language families and phylogenetic modeling, we demonstrate that languages evolve to balance these pressures, such that word order change is accompanied by change in the frequency distribution of the syntactic structures that speakers communicate to maintain overall efficiency. Variability in word order thus reflects different ways in which languages resolve these evolutionary pressures. We identify relevant characteristics that result from this joint optimization, particularly the frequency with which subjects and objects are expressed together for the same verb. Our findings suggest that syntactic structure and usage across languages coadapt to support efficient communication under limited cognitive resources.

Funder

Gouvernement du Canada | Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Gouvernement du Canada | Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Ontario Ministry of Economic Development, Job Creation and Trade

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference106 articles.

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2. M. C. Baker, The Atoms of Language (Basic Books, 2001).

3. W. A. Croft, Typology and Universals (Cambridge Textbooks in Linguistics, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom, 2nd ed., 2003).

4. M. S. Dryer, “Order of subject, object and verb” in The World Atlas of Language Structures Online, M. S. Dryer, M. Haspelmath, Eds. (Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany, 2013), chap. 81.

5. M. S. Dryer, “Determining dominant word order” in The World Atlas of Language Structures Online, M. S. Dryer, M. Haspelmath, Eds. (Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany, 2013), chap. S6.

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