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Social Network Limits Language Complexity
Abstract
Natural languages vary widely in the degree to which they make use of hierarchical composition in their grammars,in particular, the degree to which syntactic versus morphologi- cal means of composition are utilized. Languages historicallyspoken in small communities develop much deeper levels of morphological embedding than those spoken by larger groups, anobservation confirmed by a statistical analysis of the World Atlas of Language Structures. However, beyond population alone,social networks change in topological structure as they grow, and it may be the pattern of connectivity rather than numberof speakers driving these differences. To examine mechanistically this connection between social and linguistic structure, wepropose an agent-based model of grammatical change using complex network methods. We identify global transitivity asa physical parameter of social networks critical for developing morphological structure, and hubs associated with scale-freenetworks as inhibitory, encouraging syntactic composition instead.
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