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Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (Espanya) | |
Fort, Joaquim
Pérez Losada, Joaquim |
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2018 June 5 | |
It has been proposed that a serial founder effect could have caused the present observed pattern of global phonemic diversity. Here we present a model that simulates the human range expansion out of Africa and the subsequent spatial linguistic dynamics until today. It does not assume copying errors, Darwinian competition, reduced contrastive possibilities or any other specific linguistic mechanism. We show that the decrease of linguistic diversity with distance (from the presumed origin of the expansion) arises under three assumptions, previously introduced by other authors: (i) an accumulation rate for phonemes; (ii) small phonemic inventories for the languages spoken before the out-of-Africa dispersal; (iii) an increase in the phonemic accumulation rate with the number of speakers per unit area. Numerical simulations show that the predictions of the model agree with the observed decrease of linguistic diversity with increasing distance from the most likely origin of the out-of-Africa dispersal. Thus, the proposal that a serial founder effect could have caused the present observed pattern of global phonemic diversity is viable, if three strong assumptions are satisfied This work was supported in part by ICREA (Academia Humanities award to J.F.), MINECO (grants nos. SimulPast-CSD-2010-00034 and FIS-2012-31307) and the Fundacio´n BBVA (grant no. Neodigit-PIN2015E) |
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http://hdl.handle.net/2072/319315 | |
eng | |
Royal Society (Gran Bretanya) | |
Attribution 3.0 Spain | |
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/ | |
Biologia de sistemes
Systems biology Biologia computacional Computational biology Llenguatge i llengües -- Variació -- Models matemà tics Language and languages -- Variation -- Mathematical models |
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Can a linguistic serial founder effect originating in Africa explain the worldwide phonemic cline? | |
info:eu-repo/semantics/article | |
Recercat |