Modeling competitive evolution of multiple languages

07/16/2019
by   Zejie Zhou, et al.
0

Increasing evidence demonstrates that in many places language coexistence has become ubiquitous and essential for supporting language and cultural diversity and associated with its financial and economic benefits. The competitive evolution among multiple languages determines the evolution outcome, either coexistence, decline, or extinction. Here, we extend the Abrams-Strogatz model of language competition to multiple languages and then validate it by analyzing the behavioral transitions of language usage over the recent several decades in Singapore and Hong Kong. In each case, we estimate from data the model parameters that measure each language utility for its speakers and the strength of two biases, the majority preference for their language, and the minority aversion to it. The values of these two biases decide which language is the fastest growing in the competition and what would be the stable state of the system. We also study the system convergence time to stable states and discover the existence of tipping points with multiple attractors. Moreover, the critical slowdown of convergence to the stable fractions of language users appears near and peaks at the tipping points, signaling when the system approaches them. Our analysis furthers our understanding of multiple language evolution and the role of tipping points in behavioral transitions. These insights may help to protect languages from extinction and retain the language and cultural diversity.

READ FULL TEXT

page 5

page 9

page 10

research
05/06/2021

Capturing the diversity of multilingual societies

Cultural diversity encoded within languages of the world is at risk, as ...
research
03/10/2020

On the coexistence of competing languages

We investigate the evolution of competing languages, a subject where muc...
research
04/19/2023

Revitalizing Endangered Languages: AI-powered language learning as a catalyst for language appreciation

According to UNESCO, there are nearly 7,000 languages spoken worldwide, ...
research
01/10/2020

Co-evolution of language and agents in referential games

Referential games offer a grounded learning environment for neural agent...
research
02/23/2023

In What Languages are Generative Language Models the Most Formal? Analyzing Formality Distribution across Languages

Multilingual generative language models (LMs) are increasingly fluent in...
research
03/11/2011

Language, Emotions, and Cultures: Emotional Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis

An emotional version of Sapir-Whorf hypothesis suggests that differences...
research
04/02/2021

Major Cooperative Transitions and Management Theory in the Game of Life

Biological and cultural evolution show a trend towards increasing hierar...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset