On the evolution of word usage of classical Chinese poetry
Liang Liu, Lili Yu

TL;DR
This study quantitatively analyzes character usage patterns across nine periods of classical Chinese poetry, revealing evolutionary linkages that align with chronological order and identifying distinct genre clusters.
Contribution
It provides the first quantitative evidence of evolutionary linkages among Chinese poetry genres using statistical and phylogenetic analyses based on character usage.
Findings
Distinct character usage patterns for each period genre.
Decreasing trend in rare character usage over time.
Phylogenetic tree aligns with chronological order of genres.
Abstract
The hierarchy of classical Chinese poetry has been broadly acknowledged by a number of studies in Chinese literature. However, quantitative investigations about the evolutionary linkages of classical Chinese poetry are limited. The primary goal of this study is to provide quantitative evidence of the evolutionary linkages, with emphasis on character usage, among different period genres of classical Chinese poetry. Specifically, various statistical analyses are performed to find and compare the patterns of character usage in the poems of nine period genres, including shi jing, chu ci, Han shi , Jin shi, Tang shi, Song shi, Yuan shi, Ming shi, and Qing shi. The result of analysis indicates that each of nine period genres has unique patterns of character usage, with some Chinese characters that are preferably used in the poems of a particular period genre. The analysis on the general…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Text Analysis Techniques
