Publications by authors named "John Nerbonne"

Article Synopsis
  • The study introduces a new method, using naive discriminative learning (NDL), to measure pronunciation distances, which can be important for various areas of linguistics.
  • NDL offers a more advanced and flexible approach compared to the traditional Levenshtein algorithm, as it is informed by cognitive theories and can produce asymmetrical distances.
  • Validation efforts showed that NDL distances correlated well with native speakers' perceptions of accented speech, achieving correlation rates between 0.7 and 0.8, and can also integrate additional acoustic features beyond just sound segments.
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In this study we examine linguistic variation and its dependence on both social and geographic factors. We follow dialectometry in applying a quantitative methodology and focusing on dialect distances, and social dialectology in the choice of factors we examine in building a model to predict word pronunciation distances from the standard Dutch language to 424 Dutch dialects. We combine linear mixed-effects regression modeling with generalized additive modeling to predict the pronunciation distance of 559 words.

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Measuring the diffusion of linguistic change.

Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci

December 2010

We examine situations in which linguistic changes have probably been propagated via normal contact as opposed to via conquest, recent settlement and large-scale migration. We proceed then from two simplifying assumptions: first, that all linguistic variation is the result of either diffusion or independent innovation, and, second, that we may operationalize social contact as geographical distance. It is clear that both of these assumptions are imperfect, but they allow us to examine diffusion via the distribution of linguistic variation as a function of geographical distance.

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Our focus in this paper is the analysis of surnames, which have been proven to be reliable genetic markers because in patrilineal systems they are transmitted along generations virtually unchanged, similarly to a genetic locus on the Y chromosome. We compare the distribution of surnames to the distribution of dialect pronunciations, which are clearly culturally transmitted. Because surnames, at the time of their introduction, were words subject to the same linguistic processes that otherwise result in dialect differences, one might expect their geographic distribution to be correlated with dialect pronunciation differences.

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