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      Theoretical model for the evolution of the linguistic diversity

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          Abstract

          Here we describe how some important scaling laws observed in the distribution of languages on Earth can emerge from a simple computer simulation. The proposed language dynamics includes processes of selective geographic colonization, linguistic anomalous diffusion and mutation, and interaction among populations that occupy different regions. It is found that the dependence of the linguistic diversity on the area after colonization displays two power law regimes, both described by critical exponents which are dependent on the mutation probability. Most importantly for the future prospect of world's population, our results show that the linguistic diversity always decrease to an asymptotic very small value if large areas and sufficiently long times of interaction among populations are considered.

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          The future of language.

          D Graddol (2004)
          The world's language system is undergoing rapid change because of demographic trends, new technology, and international communication. These changes will affect both written and spoken communication. English may not be the dominant language of the future, and the need to be multilingual will be enhanced. Although many languages are going extinct, new ones are emerging in cities and extended social groups.
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            Author and article information

            Journal
            2005-05-27
            Article
            10.1016/j.physa.2005.06.069
            physics/0505197
            81fff067-6b2b-40f3-b3ab-e4fe8dad40b5
            History
            Custom metadata
            13 pages, 6 figures
            physics.soc-ph

            General physics
            General physics

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