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      A Relaxed Admixture Model of Language Contact

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          Abstract

          Under conditions of language contact, a language may gain features from its neighbors that it is unlikely to have gained endogenously. We describe a method for evaluating pairs of languages for potential contact by comparing a null hypothesis, in which a target language obtained all its features by inheritance, with an alternative hypothesis in which the target language obtained its features via inheritance and via contact with a proposed donor language. Under the alternative hypothesis, the donor may influence the target to gain features, but not to lose features. When applied to a database of phonological characters in South American languages, this method proves useful for detecting the effects of relatively mild and recent contact, and for highlighting several potential linguistic areas in South America.

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            The riddle of Tasmanian languages.

            Recent work which combines methods from linguistics and evolutionary biology has been fruitful in discovering the history of major language families because of similarities in evolutionary processes. Such work opens up new possibilities for language research on previously unsolvable problems, especially in areas where information from other sources may be lacking. I use phylogenetic methods to investigate Tasmanian languages. Existing materials are so fragmentary that scholars have been unable to discover how many languages are represented in the sources. Using a clustering algorithm which identifies admixture, source materials representing more than one language are identified. Using the Neighbor-Net algorithm, 12 languages are identified in five clusters. Bayesian phylogenetic methods reveal that the families are not demonstrably related; an important result, given the importance of Tasmanian Aborigines for information about how societies have responded to population collapse in prehistory. This work provides insight into the societies of prehistoric Tasmania and illustrates a new utility of phylogenetics in reconstructing linguistic history.
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              Author and article information

              Contributors
              Journal
              22105832
              Language Dynamics and Change
              LDC
              Brill (The Netherlands )
              2210-5824
              2210-5832
              2014
              : 4
              : 1
              : 1-26
              Affiliations
              University of California, Berkeley wchang@ 123456berkeley.edu
              University of California, Berkeley levmichael@ 123456berkeley.edu
              Article
              10.1163/22105832-00401005
              f84bfc95-6704-44d7-a06b-7521516c8f24
              Copyright 2014 by Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands.
              History

              Social & Behavioral Sciences,Law
              probabilistic generative model,language contact,linguistic areality,Upper Xingú,South America,phonological inventory

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