Linguistic emergence from a networks approach: The case of modern Chinese two-character words

The models of linguistic networks and their analytical tools constitute a potential methodology for investigating the formation of structural patterns in actual language use. Research with this methodology has just started, which can hopefully shed light on the emergent nature of linguistic structur...

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Autores principales: Jin Cong, Haitao Liu
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Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/ff8108d7f7b44554a6242dcc673476c1
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:ff8108d7f7b44554a6242dcc673476c12021-11-18T08:14:36ZLinguistic emergence from a networks approach: The case of modern Chinese two-character words1932-6203https://doaj.org/article/ff8108d7f7b44554a6242dcc673476c12021-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8584675/?tool=EBIhttps://doaj.org/toc/1932-6203The models of linguistic networks and their analytical tools constitute a potential methodology for investigating the formation of structural patterns in actual language use. Research with this methodology has just started, which can hopefully shed light on the emergent nature of linguistic structure. This study attempts to employ linguistic networks to investigate the formation of modern Chinese two-character words (as structural units based on the chunking of their component characters) in the actual use of modern Chinese, which manifests itself as continuous streams of Chinese characters. Network models were constructed based on authentic Chinese language data, with Chinese characters as nodes, their co-occurrence relations as directed links, and the co-occurrence frequencies as link weights. Quantitative analysis of the network models has shown that a Chinese two-character word can highlight itself as a two-node island, i.e., a cohesive sub-network with its two component characters co-occurring more frequently than they co-occur with the other characters. This highlighting mechanism may play a vital role in the formation and acquisition of two-character words in actual language use. Moreover, this mechanism may also throw some light on the emergence of other structural phenomena (with the chunking of specific linguistic units as their basis).Jin CongHaitao LiuPublic Library of Science (PLoS)articleMedicineRScienceQENPLoS ONE, Vol 16, Iss 11 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Medicine
R
Science
Q
spellingShingle Medicine
R
Science
Q
Jin Cong
Haitao Liu
Linguistic emergence from a networks approach: The case of modern Chinese two-character words
description The models of linguistic networks and their analytical tools constitute a potential methodology for investigating the formation of structural patterns in actual language use. Research with this methodology has just started, which can hopefully shed light on the emergent nature of linguistic structure. This study attempts to employ linguistic networks to investigate the formation of modern Chinese two-character words (as structural units based on the chunking of their component characters) in the actual use of modern Chinese, which manifests itself as continuous streams of Chinese characters. Network models were constructed based on authentic Chinese language data, with Chinese characters as nodes, their co-occurrence relations as directed links, and the co-occurrence frequencies as link weights. Quantitative analysis of the network models has shown that a Chinese two-character word can highlight itself as a two-node island, i.e., a cohesive sub-network with its two component characters co-occurring more frequently than they co-occur with the other characters. This highlighting mechanism may play a vital role in the formation and acquisition of two-character words in actual language use. Moreover, this mechanism may also throw some light on the emergence of other structural phenomena (with the chunking of specific linguistic units as their basis).
format article
author Jin Cong
Haitao Liu
author_facet Jin Cong
Haitao Liu
author_sort Jin Cong
title Linguistic emergence from a networks approach: The case of modern Chinese two-character words
title_short Linguistic emergence from a networks approach: The case of modern Chinese two-character words
title_full Linguistic emergence from a networks approach: The case of modern Chinese two-character words
title_fullStr Linguistic emergence from a networks approach: The case of modern Chinese two-character words
title_full_unstemmed Linguistic emergence from a networks approach: The case of modern Chinese two-character words
title_sort linguistic emergence from a networks approach: the case of modern chinese two-character words
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/ff8108d7f7b44554a6242dcc673476c1
work_keys_str_mv AT jincong linguisticemergencefromanetworksapproachthecaseofmodernchinesetwocharacterwords
AT haitaoliu linguisticemergencefromanetworksapproachthecaseofmodernchinesetwocharacterwords
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