dc.contributor
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Institut de Ciències de l'Educació
dc.contributor
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. LARCA - Laboratori d'Algorísmia Relacional, Complexitat i Aprenentatge
dc.contributor.author
González Torre, Iván
dc.contributor.author
Luque Serrano, Bartolome
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Lacasa, Lucas
dc.contributor.author
Kello, Christopher
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Hernández Fernández, Antonio
dc.date.issued
2019-08-21
dc.identifier
González, I. [et al.]. On the physical origin of linguistic laws and lognormality in speech. "Royal Society Open Science", 21 Agost 2019, vol. 6, núm. 191023.
dc.identifier
https://hdl.handle.net/2117/173635
dc.identifier
10.1098/rsos.191023
dc.description.abstract
Physical manifestations of linguistic units include sources of variability due to factors of speech production which are by definition excluded from counts of linguistic symbols. In this work, we examine whether linguistic laws hold with respect to the physical manifestations of linguistic units in spoken English. The data we analyse come from a phonetically transcribed database of acoustic recordings of spontaneous speech known as the Buckeye Speech corpus. First, we verify with unprecedented accuracy that acoustically transcribed durations of linguistic units at several scales comply with a lognormal distribution, and we quantitatively justify this ‘lognormality law’ using a stochastic generative model. Second, we explore the four classical linguistic laws (Zipf’s Law, Herdan’s Law, Brevity Law and Menzerath–Altmann’s Law (MAL)) in oral communication, both in physical units and in symbolic units measured in the speech transcriptions, and find that the validity of these laws is typically stronger when using physical units than in their symbolic counterpart. Additional results include (i) coining a Herdan’sLawin physical units, (ii) a precise mathematical formulation of Brevity Law, which we show to be connected to optimal compression principles in information theory and allows to formulate and validate yet another law which we call the sizerank law or (iii) a mathematical derivation of MAL which also highlights an additional regime where the law is inverted. Altogether, these results support the hypothesis that statistical laws in language have a physical origin.
dc.description.abstract
Peer Reviewed
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Postprint (published version)
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application/pdf
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application/pdf
dc.relation
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rsos.191023
dc.rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/
dc.rights
Attribution 3.0 Spain
dc.subject
Àrees temàtiques de la UPC::Informàtica::Intel·ligència artificial::Llenguatge natural
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Computational linguistics
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Menzerath–Altmann Law
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lognormal distribution
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Buckeye corpus
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Lingüística computacional
dc.title
On the physical origin of linguistic laws and lognormality in speech