Morphemes are the smallest meaningful parts of words and therefore represent a natural unit to study the evolution of words. To analyze the influence of language change on morphemes, we performed a large scale analysis of German and English vocabulary covering the last 200 years. Using a network approach from bioinformatics, we examined the historical dynamics of morphemes, the fixation of new morphemes and the emergence of words containing existing morphemes. We found that these processes are driven mainly by the number of different direct neighbors of a morpheme in words (connectivity, an equivalent to family size or type frequency) and not its frequency of usage (equivalent to token frequency). This contrasts words, whose survival is det...
This paper uses experimental techniques and empirical data to support the notion that morphologicall...
Greek speakers say '', Germans 'schwanz' and the French 'queue' to describe what English speakers ca...
Greek speakers say 'oυρά', Germans 'schwanz', and the French 'queue' to describe what English speake...
Morphemes are the smallest meaningful parts of words and therefore represent a natural unit to study...
Morphemes are the smallest meaningful parts of words. As one word can be composed of multiple morphe...
Words are built from smaller meaning bearing parts, called morphemes. As one word can contain multip...
Words are built from smaller meaning bearing parts, called morphemes. As one word can contain multip...
The representation of morphological information in memory was investigated in three experiments usin...
This thesis examines a critical issue in psycholinguistics, of whether the fundamental unit of repre...
The morphological complexity of languages differs widely and changes over time. Pathways of change a...
Abstract This study examines the morphological behavior of new German verbal Anglicisms by explorin...
What is the nature of language? How has it evolved in different species? Are there qualitative, well...
Words compete for survival in each language. This research investigates the cognitive mechanisms und...
This paper explores the question of when and how morphological families are formed in one’s mental l...
The judicious use of electronic corpora allows new possibilities in the study of word formation. In ...
This paper uses experimental techniques and empirical data to support the notion that morphologicall...
Greek speakers say '', Germans 'schwanz' and the French 'queue' to describe what English speakers ca...
Greek speakers say 'oυρά', Germans 'schwanz', and the French 'queue' to describe what English speake...
Morphemes are the smallest meaningful parts of words and therefore represent a natural unit to study...
Morphemes are the smallest meaningful parts of words. As one word can be composed of multiple morphe...
Words are built from smaller meaning bearing parts, called morphemes. As one word can contain multip...
Words are built from smaller meaning bearing parts, called morphemes. As one word can contain multip...
The representation of morphological information in memory was investigated in three experiments usin...
This thesis examines a critical issue in psycholinguistics, of whether the fundamental unit of repre...
The morphological complexity of languages differs widely and changes over time. Pathways of change a...
Abstract This study examines the morphological behavior of new German verbal Anglicisms by explorin...
What is the nature of language? How has it evolved in different species? Are there qualitative, well...
Words compete for survival in each language. This research investigates the cognitive mechanisms und...
This paper explores the question of when and how morphological families are formed in one’s mental l...
The judicious use of electronic corpora allows new possibilities in the study of word formation. In ...
This paper uses experimental techniques and empirical data to support the notion that morphologicall...
Greek speakers say '', Germans 'schwanz' and the French 'queue' to describe what English speakers ca...
Greek speakers say 'oυρά', Germans 'schwanz', and the French 'queue' to describe what English speake...