122222 SE Linguistics Seminar / BA Paper (2021S)
Linguistic complexity and population size
Continuous assessment of course work
Labels
REMOTE
Registration/Deregistration
Note: The time of your registration within the registration period has no effect on the allocation of places (no first come, first served).
- Registration is open from Th 18.02.2021 00:00 to Th 25.02.2021 12:00
- Deregistration possible until We 31.03.2021 23:59
Details
max. 18 participants
Language: English
Lecturers
Classes
Vorläufig online
Montag 18:15-19:45
Beginn: 08.03.2021
Information
Aims, contents and method of the course
Linguistic complexity can be assessed on different levels, such as morphology (number of inflectional or derivational morphemes), phonology (size of the phoneme inventory) or in the lexicon (distributional properties of word frequencies; see Szmrecsanyi & Kortmann 2012). One determinant of the complexity of a language is thought to be the size of its speaker population (Nettle 2012). For example, there exists some debate in linguistic research as to whether languages with many speakers also tend to feature more phonemes than comparably smaller languages do (Moran et al. 2012).In this seminar, we will investigate the relationship between linguistic complexity and population size on various levels. Students will focus on specific linguistic aspects relevant to linguistic complexity and analyze the above relationship either diachronically or comparatively. To this end, diverse data sources (census data; linguistic databases such as the World Atlas of Language Structures or Sketchengine; word frequency lists) will be used together with basic statistical techniques, in order to identify relationships between demography and language.Students will learn how to perform statistical data analysis in the programming language R (with RStudio Cloud). No preliminary knowhow in statistical computing is required, but a solid knowledge of high-school mathematics (basic calculus, fractions, percentages, functions like log or exp, linear functions) will be taken for granted. NB: data analysis is fun!IMPORTANT: All projects will be presented at a student-mini-conference, which will take place online on Saturday, June 19th, 10:00 to 14:00! Attendance is required.
Assessment and permitted materials
Course evaluation is based on:
· Participation in class (15%, individual)
· Presentation (15%, group)
· Research proposal (15%, individual)
· Seminar paper (55%, individual)
· Participation in class (15%, individual)
· Presentation (15%, group)
· Research proposal (15%, individual)
· Seminar paper (55%, individual)
Minimum requirements and assessment criteria
The minimum requirements for passing the course are:
• regular online attendance (max. 2 absences)
• handing in the proposal
• giving the oral presentation (on set date)
• handing in the seminar paper (on time)The pass rate is > 60%. To pass the course successfully, the final seminar paper has to be positive, if not the whole course is an automatic fail. Final grades & points (%) achieved: Sehr gut: 90-100; Gut: 80-89; Befriedigend: 70-79; Genügend: 60-69; Nicht Genügend: 0-59
• regular online attendance (max. 2 absences)
• handing in the proposal
• giving the oral presentation (on set date)
• handing in the seminar paper (on time)The pass rate is > 60%. To pass the course successfully, the final seminar paper has to be positive, if not the whole course is an automatic fail. Final grades & points (%) achieved: Sehr gut: 90-100; Gut: 80-89; Befriedigend: 70-79; Genügend: 60-69; Nicht Genügend: 0-59
Examination topics
Students learn how to use diachronic and comparative language data together with demographic information to address questions about the relationship between linguistic complexity and population size with quantitative methods.
Reading list
Baumann, A., Matzinger, T., In review. Correlates in the evolution of phonotactic diversity in English: linguistic structure, demographics, and network characteristics. Language Sciences.
Dahl, Ö., 2011. Are small languages more or less complex than big ones? Linguistic Typology, 15 (2), 372.
Moran, S., McCloy, D., Wright, R., 2012. Revisiting population size vs. phoneme inventory size, Language, 88 (4), 877–893.
Nettle, D., 2012. Social scale and structural complexity in human languages, Phil. Trans. R. Soc. B, 367: 1829–1836.
Szmrecsanyi, B., Kortmann, B.,2012. Introduction: linguistic complexity – Second language acquisition, indigenization, contact. In: Szmrecsanyi, B., Kortmann, B. (eds), Linguistic Complexity: Second Language Acquisition, Indigenization, Contact. Berlin: De Gruyter; 6-34.
Dahl, Ö., 2011. Are small languages more or less complex than big ones? Linguistic Typology, 15 (2), 372.
Moran, S., McCloy, D., Wright, R., 2012. Revisiting population size vs. phoneme inventory size, Language, 88 (4), 877–893.
Nettle, D., 2012. Social scale and structural complexity in human languages, Phil. Trans. R. Soc. B, 367: 1829–1836.
Szmrecsanyi, B., Kortmann, B.,2012. Introduction: linguistic complexity – Second language acquisition, indigenization, contact. In: Szmrecsanyi, B., Kortmann, B. (eds), Linguistic Complexity: Second Language Acquisition, Indigenization, Contact. Berlin: De Gruyter; 6-34.
Association in the course directory
Studium: BA 612
Code/Modul: BA06.2
Lehrinhalt: 12-2222
Code/Modul: BA06.2
Lehrinhalt: 12-2222
Last modified: We 21.04.2021 11:26