Are statistical methods useful in distinguishing written language from nonlinguistic symbol systems? Some recent articles (Rao et al. 2009a, Lee et al. 2010a) have claimed so. Both of these previous articles use measures based at least in part on bigram conditional entropy, and subsequent work by one of the authors (Rao) has used other entropic measures. In both cases the authors have argued that the methods proposed either are useful for discriminating between linguistic and non-linguistic systems (Lee et al.), or at least count as evidence of a more ‘inductive ’ kind for the sta-tus of a system (Rao et al.). Using a larger set of nonlinguistic and comparison linguistic corpora than were used in these and other studies, I show that none of...
The choice associated with words is a fundamental property of natural languages. It lies at the hear...
It is desirable to distinguish between lexicostatistics as a means of proving relationships between ...
Proceedings of the Twenty-Ninth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society: General Session ...
Are statistical methods useful in distinguishing written language from nonlinguistic symbol systems?...
An article published in Language (Sproat 2014a) questions our findings on the Indus script and Picti...
Many prehistoric societies have left a wealth of inscribed symbols for which the meanings are lost. ...
In his article "Ancient symbols and computational linguistics" (Sproat 2010), Professor Sproat raise...
each feature's positive or negative contribution to We present a comparative analysis of the pe...
The idea that statistical significance tests can be applied to the task of determining re-latedness ...
Statistics is known to be a quantitative approach to research. However, most of the research done in...
The relationship between the entropy of language and its complexity has been the subject of much spe...
This article has two main purposes. The first one is to prove that the alleged superiority of the al...
The choice associated with words is a fundamental property of natural languages. It lies at the hear...
International audienceAs the quality and availability of corpora of lesser-documented languages grow...
This paper introduces an objective metric for assessing the effectiveness of a parsing scheme. Infor...
The choice associated with words is a fundamental property of natural languages. It lies at the hear...
It is desirable to distinguish between lexicostatistics as a means of proving relationships between ...
Proceedings of the Twenty-Ninth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society: General Session ...
Are statistical methods useful in distinguishing written language from nonlinguistic symbol systems?...
An article published in Language (Sproat 2014a) questions our findings on the Indus script and Picti...
Many prehistoric societies have left a wealth of inscribed symbols for which the meanings are lost. ...
In his article "Ancient symbols and computational linguistics" (Sproat 2010), Professor Sproat raise...
each feature's positive or negative contribution to We present a comparative analysis of the pe...
The idea that statistical significance tests can be applied to the task of determining re-latedness ...
Statistics is known to be a quantitative approach to research. However, most of the research done in...
The relationship between the entropy of language and its complexity has been the subject of much spe...
This article has two main purposes. The first one is to prove that the alleged superiority of the al...
The choice associated with words is a fundamental property of natural languages. It lies at the hear...
International audienceAs the quality and availability of corpora of lesser-documented languages grow...
This paper introduces an objective metric for assessing the effectiveness of a parsing scheme. Infor...
The choice associated with words is a fundamental property of natural languages. It lies at the hear...
It is desirable to distinguish between lexicostatistics as a means of proving relationships between ...
Proceedings of the Twenty-Ninth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society: General Session ...