Toponyms and the Geographic Extension of Languages: A computational-visual approach

  • Datum: 11 mars 2025, kl. 14.30–15.15
  • Plats: Engelska parken, 9–3042
  • Typ: Seminarium
  • Föreläsare: Harald Hammarström & Guillaume Segerer
  • Webbsida
  • Arrangör: WoGEL
  • Kontaktperson: Johan Ulrik Nielsen

I "Toponyms and the Geographic Extension of Languages: A computational-visual approach" präsenterar Harald Hammarström (Uppsala) och Guillaume Segerer (LLACAN, CNRS, Paris) för WoGEL (Working Group of Empirical Linguistics) en metod till att använda ortsnamnslement associerat med olika språk till geo-spatiell utvidgning av glottologs centerpunkt-baserade koordinater för världens språk.

Utdrag av resumé (Hammarström och Segerer; för hela resumét och figurer, kontakta kontaktperson(er)):

Centre-point coordinates for the approximately 7,000 languages in the world are available via glottolog.org, but there is no open database with the full geospatial extension, i.e., polygon data, for languages globally. However, the Geonames database http://geonames.org gathers more than 11 million place names with coordinates.

[…]

Many of these toponyms contain a formative element, such as, for example, -ville in Libreville, Lastourville etc, or -dougou in Ouagadougou, Bélédougou etc. We propose that such formatives can be detected automatically by measuring the geographic concentration C(s) of potential sub-strings s as the average distance d (as the crow flies) between all pairs of toponym p1, p2 pertaining to s:

C(s) = (∑ₚ₁,ₚ₂∈ₛ d(p1, p2))/(#ₚ₁,ₚ₂∈ₛ)

[…]

Using this measure, we can calculate the probability P(s) that the concentration C(s) is due to chance. Each toponym can then be segmented according to its most non-randomly concentrated (if any) formative.

[…]

Further, since each formative belongs to a language and overlapping formatives arguably belong to the same language, we may try to associate each language with a set of formatives. This yields the desired spatial extensions.

The approach will be illustrated and evaluated in a case study of West African toponyms and languages.

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