Event
Christopher Ahern will defend his dissertation on Friday, December 18th at 12:00 pm in the IRCS Large Conference Room.
Title: Cycles and stability in linguistic signaling
Supervisor: Robin Clark
Committee: Mark Liberman, Florian Schwarz
Abstract:
This dissertation advances our understanding of the roles
played by pragmatic and grammatical competence in theories
of language change by applying mathematical and statistical
methods to the cross-linguistic change in the expression of
negation known as Jespersen's cycle.
In the history of Middle English this change is often
characterized by two transitions: the first is from
pre-verbal /ne/ to an initially emphatic embracing
/ne...not/; the second is from embracing /ne...not/ to
post-verbal /not/. However, this description conflates two
related but distinct processes. The formal cycle describes
changes in the forms of negation available and consists of
the transitions from pre-verbal to embracing to post-verbal
negation. The functional cycle describes changes in how
forms are used to signal meaning and consists of the
transition from pre-verbal to embracing negation. While
these two processes often overlap, the functional cycle can
occur independently of the formal cycle. This informs the
structure of the dissertation where we address the
functional and formal cycles in turn.
Using tools from evolutionary game theory, we show that the
functional cycle can be explained by limits on our pragmatic
competence. In Middle English the incoming embracing form is
initially restricted to negating propositions that are
common information between interlocutors because they have
recently been introduced to or can be inferred from the
preceding discourse. But, experimental evidence shows that
speakers have difficulty in distinguishing between common
and privileged information. Speakers use the initially
restricted form in more and more contexts that are less and
less closely tied to the discourse. As the form increases in
frequency it loses the information it carried, undergoing a
kind of bleaching.
Applying statistical methods developed in population
genetics to the Penn Parsed Corpus of Middle English, we
show that grammatical competence, and the process of
acquisition through which it is formed, cannot explain
either of the transitions of the formal cycle. In both
cases, we would expect stability rather than change, unless
the observed transitions are the result of the accumulation
of small random changes akin to genetic drift in finite
populations. We show that we can reject this possibility in
the first transition of the formal cycle, but not in the
second. The possibility of random change in the second
transition of the formal cycle offers some insight into the
varying amount of time it takes across languages.
The main contribution of this dissertation is demonstrating
the need for articulated models of both pragmatic and
grammatical competence in explanatory theories of language
change. By offering a set of tools and methods for analyzing
and distinguishing between different factors in a
quantitative manner, we can refine our theories of language
change.