Emergence of Scale-Free Syntax Networks
Bernat Corominas-Murtra, Sergi Valverde, Ricard V. Sol\'e

TL;DR
This paper analyzes how children's syntax networks evolve from simple tree-like structures to complex scale-free networks around age two, suggesting innate components influence language development.
Contribution
It presents the first analysis of syntax emergence as a network transition, highlighting innate factors and proposing a minimal model capturing key statistical traits.
Findings
Sharp transition to scale-free, small-world syntax networks around age two
Evidence supporting innate components in language development
Some syntax features may be non-adaptive phenomena
Abstract
The evolution of human language allowed the efficient propagation of nongenetic information, thus creating a new form of evolutionary change. Language development in children offers the opportunity of exploring the emergence of such complex communication system and provides a window to understanding the transition from protolanguage to language. Here we present the first analysis of the emergence of syntax in terms of complex networks. A previously unreported, sharp transition is shown to occur around two years of age from a (pre-syntactic) tree-like structure to a scale-free, small world syntax network. The nature of such transition supports the presence of an innate component pervading the emergence of full syntax. This observation is difficult to interpret in terms of any simple model of network growth, thus suggesting that some internal, perhaps innate component was at work. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLanguage and cultural evolution · Origins and Evolution of Life · Evolutionary Algorithms and Applications
