In recent years, South Americanist linguists have embraced computational phylogenetic methods to resolve the numerous outstanding questions about the genealogical relationships among the languages of the continent. We provide a critical review of the methods and language classification results that have accumulated thus far, emphasizing the superiority of character-based methods over distance-based ones and the importance of developing adequate comparative datasets for producing well-resolved classifications
Computational phylogenetics is a relatively recent branch of historical linguistics that uses quanti...
The degree of linguistic diversity in South America is comparable only to that in New Guinea (see Ch...
We present initial exploratory work on illuminating the long-standingquestion of areal versus geneal...
In recent years, South Americanist linguists have embraced computational phylogenetic methods to res...
With some 108 independent genealogical units, South America is the linguistically most diverse regio...
Several databases have been compiled with the aim of documenting the distribution of typological fea...
The relationship between the evolution of genes and languages has been studied for over three decade...
The conceptual parallels between linguistic and biological evolution are striking; languages, like g...
The parallels between biological and linguistic evolution have been recognized for a long time. In t...
The reconstruction of phylogenetic trees of language families is one of the main problems in Histori...
In light of recent controversies surrounding the use of computational methods for the reconstruction...
Over the past two decades, many of the major controversies in historical linguistics have centred on...
Home to more than twenty indigenous languages belonging to six linguistic families, the Gran Chaco h...
Abstract: In this paper we present the first results of the application of computational methods, in...
Computational methods derived from evolutionary biology are increasingly being applied to the study...
Computational phylogenetics is a relatively recent branch of historical linguistics that uses quanti...
The degree of linguistic diversity in South America is comparable only to that in New Guinea (see Ch...
We present initial exploratory work on illuminating the long-standingquestion of areal versus geneal...
In recent years, South Americanist linguists have embraced computational phylogenetic methods to res...
With some 108 independent genealogical units, South America is the linguistically most diverse regio...
Several databases have been compiled with the aim of documenting the distribution of typological fea...
The relationship between the evolution of genes and languages has been studied for over three decade...
The conceptual parallels between linguistic and biological evolution are striking; languages, like g...
The parallels between biological and linguistic evolution have been recognized for a long time. In t...
The reconstruction of phylogenetic trees of language families is one of the main problems in Histori...
In light of recent controversies surrounding the use of computational methods for the reconstruction...
Over the past two decades, many of the major controversies in historical linguistics have centred on...
Home to more than twenty indigenous languages belonging to six linguistic families, the Gran Chaco h...
Abstract: In this paper we present the first results of the application of computational methods, in...
Computational methods derived from evolutionary biology are increasingly being applied to the study...
Computational phylogenetics is a relatively recent branch of historical linguistics that uses quanti...
The degree of linguistic diversity in South America is comparable only to that in New Guinea (see Ch...
We present initial exploratory work on illuminating the long-standingquestion of areal versus geneal...