# Language competition in a population of migrating agents

**Authors:** Dorota Lipowska, Adam Lipowski

arXiv: 1702.07888 · 2017-05-17

## TL;DR

This paper models language formation among migrating agents, showing that low-mobility languages tend to dominate while high-mobility languages are eliminated, highlighting the impact of migration patterns on language competition.

## Contribution

It introduces a Naming Game model with migrating agents to analyze how migration influences language dominance and formation.

## Key findings

- Low-mobility clusters form and dominate.
- High-mobility languages are gradually eliminated.
- Language formation dynamics slow down over time.

## Abstract

Influencing various aspects of human activity, migration is associated also with language formation. To examine the mutual interaction of these processes, we study a Naming Game with migrating agents. The dynamics of the model leads to formation of low-mobility clusters, which turns out to break the symmetry of the model: although the Naming Game remains symmetric, low-mobility languages are favoured. High-mobility languages are gradually eliminated from the system and the dynamics of language formation considerably slows down. Our model is too simple to explain in detail language competition of migrating human communities, but it certainly shows that languages of settlers are favoured over nomadic ones.

## Full text

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## Figures

9 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1702.07888/full.md

## References

24 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1702.07888/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1702.07888