ID: cond-mat/0309266

What's in a name?

September 11, 2003

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Does network complexity help organize Babel's library?

September 23, 2014

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Juan Pablo Cárdenas, Iván González, ... , Fuentes Miguel
Physics and Society
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In this work, we study properties of texts from the perspective of complex network theory. Words in given texts are linked by co-occurrence and transformed into networks, and we observe that these display topological properties common to other complex systems. However, there are some properties that seem to be exclusive to texts; many of these properties depend on the frequency of words in the text, while others seem to be strictly determined by the grammar. Precisely, these ...

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Network model of human language

September 19, 2007

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Maria Markosova
Physics and Society
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The phenomenon of human language is widely studied from various points of view. It is interesting not only for social scientists, antropologists or philosophers, but also for those, interesting in the network dynamics. In several recent papers word web, or language as a graph has been investigated. In this paper I revise recent studies of syntactical word web. I present a model of growing network in which such processes as node addition, edge rewiring and new link creation ...

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The effect of linguistic constraints on the large scale organization of language

February 14, 2011

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Madhav Krishna, Ahmed Hassan, ... , Radev Dragomir
Computation and Language
Social and Information Netwo...

This paper studies the effect of linguistic constraints on the large scale organization of language. It describes the properties of linguistic networks built using texts of written language with the words randomized. These properties are compared to those obtained for a network built over the text in natural order. It is observed that the "random" networks too exhibit small-world and scale-free characteristics. They also show a high degree of clustering. This is indeed a surp...

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Beyond word frequency: Bursts, lulls, and scaling in the temporal distributions of words

January 15, 2009

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Eduardo G. Altmann, Janet B. Pierrehumbert, Adilson E. Motter
Computation and Language
Disordered Systems and Neura...
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Physics and Society

Background: Zipf's discovery that word frequency distributions obey a power law established parallels between biological and physical processes, and language, laying the groundwork for a complex systems perspective on human communication. More recent research has also identified scaling regularities in the dynamics underlying the successive occurrences of events, suggesting the possibility of similar findings for language as well. Methodology/Principal Findings: By consider...

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Discovering Global Patterns in Linguistic Networks through Spectral Analysis: A Case Study of the Consonant Inventories

January 15, 2009

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Animesh Mukherjee, Monojit Choudhury, Ravi Kannan
Computation and Language
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Recent research has shown that language and the socio-cognitive phenomena associated with it can be aptly modeled and visualized through networks of linguistic entities. However, most of the existing works on linguistic networks focus only on the local properties of the networks. This study is an attempt to analyze the structure of languages via a purely structural technique, namely spectral analysis, which is ideally suited for discovering the global correlations in a networ...

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Avalanches and Generalized Memory Associativity in a Network Model for Conscious and Unconscious Mental Functioning

April 10, 2017

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Maheen Siddiqui, Roseli S. Wedemann, Henrik Jensen
Neurons and Cognition
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We explore statistical characteristics of avalanches associated with the dynamics of a complex-network model, where two modules corresponding to sensorial and symbolic memories interact, representing unconscious and conscious mental processes. The model illustrates Freud's ideas regarding the neuroses and that consciousness is related with symbolic and linguistic memory activity in the brain. It incorporates the Stariolo-Tsallis generalization of the Boltzmann Machine in orde...

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How humans learn and represent networks

September 16, 2019

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Christopher W. Lynn, Danielle S. Bassett
Physics and Society
Applied Physics
Biological Physics
Neurons and Cognition

Humans communicate, receive, and store information using sequences of items -- from words in a sentence or notes in music to abstract concepts in lectures and books. The networks formed by these items (nodes) and the sequential transitions between them (edges) encode important structural features of human communication and knowledge. But how do humans learn the networks of probabilistic transitions that underlie sequences of items? Moreover, what do people's internal maps of ...

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Perceptions of Complex Systems Are Governed by Power Laws

January 21, 2006

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Uygar Ozesmi
Other Quantitative Biology
Quantitative Methods

Many networks in natural and human-made systems exhibit scale-free properties and are small worlds. Now we show that people's understanding of complex systems in their cognitive maps also follow a scale-free topology. People focus on a few attributes, relating these with many other things in the system. Many more attributes have very few connections. People use relatively short explanations to describe events; their cognitive map is a small world with less than six degrees of...

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Using Complex Networks to Quantify Consistency in the Use of Words

February 17, 2013

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Diego R. Amancio, Osvaldo N. Jr. Oliveira, Luciano da F. Costa
Physics and Society
Social and Information Netwo...
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In this paper we quantify the consistency of word usage in written texts represented by complex networks, where words were taken as nodes, by measuring the degree of preservation of the node neighborhood.} Words were considered highly consistent if the authors used them with the same neighborhood. When ranked according to the consistency of use, the words obeyed a log-normal distribution, in contrast to the Zipf's law that applies to the frequency of use. Consistency correlat...

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Polish and English wordnets -- statistical analysis of interconnected networks

April 7, 2014

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Maksymilian Bujok, Piotr Fronczak, Agata Fronczak
Computation and Language
Physics and Society

Wordnets are semantic networks containing nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs organized according to linguistic principles, by means of semantic relations. In this work, we adopt a complex network perspective to perform a comparative analysis of the English and Polish wordnets. We determine their similarities and show that the networks exhibit some of the typical characteristics observed in other real-world networks. We analyse interlingual relations between both wordnets a...

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