Extracting information from S-curves of language change
This work provides insights into the mechanisms of language change, which is relevant for linguists and sociologists, but it is incremental as it builds on existing S-curve models and applies them to new data.
The paper analyzes how much information about innovation spreading dynamics can be extracted from S-curves, focusing on linguistic innovations using detailed historical text data, and finds that S-curve shapes are not universal and reveal signatures of endogenous and exogenous factors, with specific cases identified where each factor dominates.
It is well accepted that adoption of innovations are described by S-curves (slow start, accelerating period, and slow end). In this paper, we analyze how much information on the dynamics of innovation spreading can be obtained from a quantitative description of S-curves. We focus on the adoption of linguistic innovations for which detailed databases of written texts from the last 200 years allow for an unprecedented statistical precision. Combining data analysis with simulations of simple models (e.g., the Bass dynamics on complex networks) we identify signatures of endogenous and exogenous factors in the S-curves of adoption. We propose a measure to quantify the strength of these factors and three different methods to estimate it from S-curves. We obtain cases in which the exogenous factors are dominant (in the adoption of German orthographic reforms and of one irregular verb) and cases in which endogenous factors are dominant (in the adoption of conventions for romanization of Russian names and in the regularization of most studied verbs). These results show that the shape of S-curve is not universal and contains information on the adoption mechanism. (published at "J. R. Soc. Interface, vol. 11, no. 101, (2014) 1044"; DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2014.1044)