Affiliation:
1. The University of Queensland
2. Yale University
3. University of Surrey
4. Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History
Abstract
Abstract
Phylogenetic methods have broad potential in linguistics beyond tree inference. Here, we show how a phylogenetic approach
opens the possibility of gaining historical insights from entirely new kinds of linguistic data – in this instance, statistical
phonotactics. We extract phonotactic data from 112 Pama-Nyungan vocabularies and apply tests for phylogenetic signal,
quantifying the degree to which the data reflect phylogenetic history. We test three datasets: (1) binary variables recording the presence
or absence of biphones (two-segment sequences) in a lexicon (2) frequencies of transitions between segments, and (3)
frequencies of transitions between natural sound classes. Australian languages have been characterized as having a high degree of
phonotactic homogeneity. Nevertheless, we detect phylogenetic signal in all datasets. Phylogenetic signal is greater in finer-grained
frequency data than in binary data, and greatest in natural-class-based data. These results demonstrate the viability of employing a new
source of readily extractable data in historical and comparative linguistics.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
13 articles.
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