English

Approaching the linguistic complexity

Computation and Language 2015-11-11 v1 Data Analysis, Statistics and Probability

Abstract

We analyze the rank-frequency distributions of words in selected English and Polish texts. We compare scaling properties of these distributions in both languages. We also study a few small corpora of Polish literary texts and find that for a corpus consisting of texts written by different authors the basic scaling regime is broken more strongly than in the case of comparable corpus consisting of texts written by the same author. Similarly, for a corpus consisting of texts translated into Polish from other languages the scaling regime is broken more strongly than for a comparable corpus of native Polish texts. Moreover, based on the British National Corpus, we consider the rank-frequency distributions of the grammatically basic forms of words (lemmas) tagged with their proper part of speech. We find that these distributions do not scale if each part of speech is analyzed separately. The only part of speech that independently develops a trace of scaling is verbs.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0901.3291,
  title  = {Approaching the linguistic complexity},
  author = {Stanislaw Drozdz and Jaroslaw Kwapien and Adam Orczyk},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0901.3291},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

to be published in conference proceedings

R2 v1 2026-06-21T12:03:16.603Z