Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rcrh6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T17:26:52.207Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Detecting linguistic variation with geographic sampling

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 May 2024

Ezequiel Koile*
Affiliation:
Department of Linguistic and Cultural Evolution, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany
George Moroz*
Affiliation:
Linguistic Convergence Laboratory, HSE University, Moscow, Russia
*
Corresponding author: Emails: [email protected] and [email protected]
Corresponding author: Emails: [email protected] and [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Geolectal variation is often present in settings where one language is spoken across a vast geographic area. This can be found in phonological, morphosyntactic, and lexical features. For practical reasons, it is not always possible to conduct fieldwork in every single location of interest in order to obtain the full pattern of variation, and a sample of them must be chosen. We propose and test a method for sampling these locations, with the goal of obtaining a distribution of typological features representative of the whole area. We apply k-means and hierarchical clustering algorithms for defining this sample, based on their geographic distribution. We test our methods against simulated data with several spatial configurations, and also against real data from Circassian dialects (Northwest Caucasian). Our results show an efficiency significantly higher than random sampling for detecting this variation, which makes our method profitable to fieldworkers when designing their research.

Type
Articles
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press

1. Introduction

Languages spoken across a vast geographic area tend to present dissimilarities in their local varieties, to a higher or a lower degree. The term geolectal variation stands for the different forms that a language takes across its geographically separated varieties (Labov, Reference Labov1963). This variation can be present in different forms, such as phonological, morphosyntactic, and lexical features. This type of linguistic variation has been addressed by dialectologists since the mid-nineteenth century and was considered generally by linguists only in the second half of the twentieth century (Chambers and Trudgill, Reference Chambers and Trudgill2004). Traditionally, this phenomenon has been overlooked, with homogeneous distributions being assumed in most studies (Dorian, Reference Dorian2010).

In certain regions, it is possible to find a geographic dialect continuum formed by a group of settlements whose dialects differ slightly with distance. This generates a situation where every group of contiguous settlements speak very similar, intelligible varieties, but more distant settlements of the same continuum speak varieties that are non-intelligible (Chambers and Trudgill, Reference Chambers and Trudgill2004). This is the case of several groups of languages in Europe, such as the West Romance, East Slavic, or Scandinavian dialect continua, and it is particularly relevant in the Caucasus.

In order to account for the variation in a geographic region, it is necessary to collect data from a significant number of different locations. Although methods for collecting a large amount of linguisitc data in a short period of time exist (and they thrived during the COVID-19 pandemic [Leemann et al., Reference Leemann, Jeszenszky, Steiner, Studerus and Messerli2020; Staff, Reference Staff2019; Sprouse, Reference Sprouse2011; Piller, Zhang, & Li, Reference Piller, Zhang and Li2020]), in this kind of research, linguists need take into account geographical imbalance, quality, and representativity of the obtained data (e.g. in terms of recording conditions, possibility of speech disorders, and others). Therefore, this collection must be done in a systematic way, such as field expeditions where questionnaires are elicited and completed by experienced researchers with high quality recording devices. For practical reasons, it is not always possible to collect fieldwork data from every single location in order to obtain this full pattern of variation. Instead, it is more efficient to collect data from a selected group of these settlements, which we will call a sample. The question arises of which locations should be surveyed, either in order to resemble the real distribution of linguistic features, or at least to detect the degree of different values that exist for each of them.

1.1. Spatial sampling

Spatial sampling is a well developed field (see Stehman and Overton, Reference Stehman, Overton and Arlinghaus1995; Delmelle, Reference Delmelle, Stewart Fotheringham and Rogerson2009 and references therein), but no systematic study specific to linguistics has been carried out to date. According to Delmelle (Reference Delmelle, Stewart Fotheringham and Rogerson2009), spatial sampling can be used in order to solve three categories of problems: estimating non-spatial characteristics of a spatial population, summarizing spatial variation of a variable in the form of a map, and obtaining observations independent from each other from a spatially structured dataset. All of them are relevant to us.

We focus on a two-dimensional discrete spatial sampling, where our goal is to sample a set n out of a population of N spatially structured datapoints. Delmelle (Reference Delmelle, Stewart Fotheringham and Rogerson2009) divides such sampling methods into i) uniform random sampling, ii) systematic sampling (which can be further divided into regular, random, and unaligned), and iii) stratified sampling.

In the uniform random sampling, the dots are randomly selected, and the selection of a unit does not influence the selection of any other. The advantages of this method are its operational simplicity and its capacity to generate a wide variety of distances among pairs of points in the sample. Its main disadvantage is that the distribution of selected points may not be representative of the underlying population, resulting in some areas being oversampled and others undersampled.

In the systematic sampling, the space of interest is divided into a uniform grid of subregions or cells, and one sample is taken from each of these. It is called regular systematic if the sample is always taken from the same location inside the cell (e.g. its center), systematic unaligned if there is a differentiate algorithm for choosing the sample inside each cell, or systematic random if the sample inside each cell is taken at random. The benefits of this approach are a good spreading of observations across the whole region of interest, resulting in a representative sampling coverage, and avoiding sampling clustering and redundancy. Its inconveniences are that the distribution of distances between points in the sample is biased (many points are separated by the same distance, i.e. multiples of the cell size), and there is the possibility of missing spatially periodic behaviors.

Finally, in stratified sampling, the region of interest is partitioned into non-overlapping strata, making the systematic sampling a special case of stratified sampling. For each stratum, one or more samples are collected. The main challenge here is deciding the shape and size of each stratum. Also, a criterion is necessary for deciding how many dots will be sampled in each stratum (e.g. an amount proportional to the size of the stratum or only one for each stratum) and how this will be selected (e.g. always in the center of the stratum, or at random).

One issue to take into account is that of spatial auto-correlation. In the case of spatially structured data, we expect stronger similarities among closely spaced datapoints, and it is therefore redundant to oversample in those areas. Spatial auto-correlation, defined as how similar the values of the variable of interest are at different locations as a function of their separating distance, generally decreases as the distance among sample points increases, and the functional form of this decrease makes one or other sampling methods more efficient, that is, to have a lower variance.

It has been argued that linear distances between point locations are not the best way of accounting for the possibility of linguistic contact, but an inverse-square law might be more useful (Nikolaev, Reference Nikolaev2019). Although we think this is a relevant observation for larger distances (such as the macro-area of Eurasia, studied in the mentioned reference), linear distances are a good enough measurement for our region of interest, the Caucasus.

It also should be mentioned that, in our paper, we used fake latitude and longitude values for simulations and real latitude and longitude values for Circassian data. Using those values as a simple two-dimensional space is equivalent to projecting our observation in the Mercator projection, known for causing a huge distortion in sizes. This is not a big problem for the small area that we analyze, but it could be so for other regions of interest. Therefore, we propose applying our methods onto projected coordinate systems with a projection suitable for the area under analysis.

1.2. The aim of this study

In the present paper, we propose and test a method for sampling different locations, with the goal of obtaining the distribution of linguistic features most representative of the whole area. For this goal, we use different clustering algorithms, such as k-means and hierarchical clustering of the locations. Using spatial clustering is not particularly new, since it can be found in the list of methods from Delmelle (Reference Delmelle, Stewart Fotheringham and Rogerson2009). The novelty in our approach is that we test this algorithm using four spatial configurations for the locations involved, which we call circular equidistant, center–periphery, dialect chain, and uniform. We test our methods against both simulated data with a different number of categories, with all possible distributions of our linguistic feature of interest, and on various spatial configurations, and also against real data from Circassian dialects (Northwest Caucasian). This assures us a geographically representative sample, less affected by spatial auto-correlation than a random selection. Our results show an efficiency higher than random sampling, both for detecting variation and for estimating its magnitude, which makes our method profitable to fieldworkers when designing their research.

In section 2 we describe the data used, both in our simulation and in our example of real data on Circassian languages. In section 3 we describe the clustering methods used. In section 4 we describe and discuss the results obtained. In section 5 we summarize our conclusions. We used the packages lingtypology (Moroz, Reference Moroz2017), partitions (Hankin, Reference Hankin2006), stats (R Core Team, 2021), and tidyverse (Wickham et al. Reference Wickham, Averick, Bryan, Chang, McGowan, François, Grolemund, Hayes, Henry, Hester, Kuhn, Pedersen, Miller, Bache, Müller, Ooms, Robinson, Seidel, Spinu, Takahashi, Vaughan, Wilke, Woo and Yutani2019) in the programming language R. All code and data are available on GitHub.Footnote 1

2. Data

In this paper we focus on the scenario where a researcher is interested in one or more linguistic features with discrete values. This can represent the realization of a phonological feature, a morphosyntactic feature, the attestation of a lexical item, or an overall feature of the variety, such as the dialect spoken in a region. However, our method can be extended to numeric variables such as number of cases or vowel length. We give one single value to the feature of interest in each settlement. This is a simplification of the real situation, where inter-speaker and intra-speaker variation can be present in the same settlement (see Dorian, Reference Dorian2010; Moroz and Verhees, Reference Moroz and Verhees2019).

2.1. Generation of simulated data

We generated data that resembles different distributions found in realistic linguistic settings. In all cases, we generated a number of settlements N s , ranging from 30 to 90 in decades, and a number N c of different categories for the feature of interest, ranging from 3 to 9. For each combination of N s and N c , each category can be differently populated. For example, if we have N s = 50 and N c = 5, an even distribution will group exactly 10 settlements in each category (configuration 10–10–10–10–10), while an extremely skewed distribution will have one overly populated category with 46 settlements, and the remaining four categories with only one settlement each (configuration 46–1–1–1–1). We call this distribution the count configuration Q, and its associated entropy is H(Q) (Shannon, Reference Shannon1948).

We distinguish four spatial configurations, that we call circular equidistant, center–periphery, dialect chain, and uniform, described below. In all configurations, the locations of settlements labeled with each category are generated as a bimodal normal or log-normal distribution around a center, as explained below. The different configurations refer to how these centers are located in space, as well as the parameters of the normal distribution. More complex configurations that have been defined in the bibliography (see e.g. Goossens, Reference Goossens1977:78), such as enclave, funnel, tubular, or ring, are not considered a priori, although some enclave-like configurations can emerge from the overlapping regions of our simulated data, which might be associated with the mixed zones (Mischgebiet) in the mentioned reference.Footnote 2

Circular equidistant. In this configuration, the centers of each category correspond to the vertices of a regular polygon of N c sides, circumscribing a circumference of radius r, centered in the origin. Therefore, all centers are at distance r from the origin, and each category has two closest neighbors to its sides at a distance equal to the polygon’s side, ${d_t} = 2r \cdot \sin \big( {{\pi \over {{N_c}}}} \big)$ . In the tangential direction, settlements belonging to a given category follow a normal distribution centered in the corresponding vertex of the polygon and with a standard deviation equal to half of the distance between closest neighbors σ t = d t /2, allowing for some overlap. In the radial direction, we allow settlements to approach the origin, but not to expand too much outwards. For this reason, we choose a log-normal distribution bound by 2r, and decaying towards the origin, with standard deviation σ r = r. Figure 1(a) shows an example of this distribution for N s = 117, N c = 6, and Q = (42,21,19,13,11,11).

Figure 1. (a) Circular equidistant, (b) center–periphery, (c) dialect chain, and (d) uniform distributions for N s = 117 settlements distributed in N c = 6 categories, with a count configuration Q = (42,21,19,13,11,11) and r = 26. In (a), the distributions’ centers form a regular hexagon. In (b), the most populated category lies in the origin, while the other centers form a regular pentagon around it. In (c), they form a straight line. In (d), all centers coincide at the origin. The dots within each category are surrounded with their normal ellipses (Fox and Weisberg, Reference Fox and Weisberg2018). The centers around which the data are generated in (a) and (b) form regular polygons, while the polygons showed here link the centroids of the generated data a posteriori and are therefore not regular. Similarly, the dialect chain in (c) does not form a horizontal segment, although the centers for data generation did.

Center–Periphery. This configuration is built in a fashion similar to the previous one, with one main difference: The most populated settlement is located at the origin, and all others form an (N c − 1)-side regular polygon around it. All of these peripheral settlements lie at the same distance r from the central one and have two closest neighbors in addition to this one, at a distance ${d_r} = 2r \cdot \sin \left( {{\pi \over {{N_c} - 1}}} \right)$ . Again, in the tangential direction, settlements belonging to a given category follow a normal distribution centered in the corresponding vertex of the polygon, with a standard deviation equal to half of the distance between closest neighbors σ t = d t /2; and in the radial direction they form a log-normal distribution bound by 2r, decaying towards the origin, with standard deviation σ r = r. Figure 1(b) shows an example of this distribution for N s = 117, N c = 6, and Q = (42,21,19,13,11,11).

Dialect chain. This configuration is similar to the circular equidistant one, but along a straight line. Here, the N c centers of each category lie on a straight line, each separated by distance r from its closest neighbors. Therefore, the distance between two contiguous centers is d = r, while distance between the two most extreme centers is ${d_M} = ({N_c}-1) \cdot r$ . The settlements belonging to a given category follow a normal distribution centered in the corresponding point in the straight line, with standard deviation σ = r in both the direction along the line and the perpendicular one, resulting in circular distributions with some overlap between neighbors. Figure 1(c) shows an example of this distribution for N s = 117, N c = 6, and Q = (42,21,19,13,11,11).

Uniform. In this configuration, the centers of all N c categories coincide at the origin, and settlements around them form a uniform squared distribution, with standard deviation r. Figure 1(d) shows an example of this distribution for N s = 117, N c = 6, and Q = (42,21,19,13,11,11).

2.2. Real data: Circassian languages

As a real example application of this procedure, we use data for Circassian languages (Northwest Caucasian), from Moroz (Reference Moroz2017). This dataset contains different linguistic data for 158 Circassian settlements in the Russian Caucasus. We consider two different features for these data. First, we study the dialect spoken in each settlement. There are eight dialects, each spoken in the following number of settlements: Baksan (68), Bzhedukh (27), Kuban (17), Temirgoy (15), Shapsug (13), Terek (10), Besleney (5), and Malkin (3). These dialects show a distribution with a clear geographical pattern, as can be seen in Map 1. The second feature we study is the reflex of *qh (Moroz, Reference Moroz2021), which has different values in different settlements: qh in Neshukay (Bzhedukh) and Besleney (Besleney), q in Bolshoy Kichmay (Shapsug) and Pshicho (Temirgoy), χ in Pseytuk (Shapsug) and Khadzhiko (Shapsug), and qχ in Zhako (Kuban) and Khodz’ (Kuban). This feature has four categories, and its distribution does not show an obvious geographical pattern, as can be seen in Map 2.

Map 1. Distribution of dialects in the Circassian settlements.

Map 2. The distribution of Circassian reflex of *qh.

3. Clustering methods

For each case study, we examined how much of the real variation in the data we would be able to discover by using three different sampling strategies. Remember that we had N s settlements with a given geographical configuration, and our feature of interest was distributed across N c categories, according to a count configuration Q. We wanted to characterize the amount n c of categories discovered after sampling n s settlements with different criteria. The discovery fraction, $df = {{{n_c}} \over {{N_c}}}$ , was used as a score for comparing sampling methods. All methods described below (except for random sampling) were our clustering methods based on geographical distance.

Random sampling. The most trivial form of sampling is random: If we assume that there is no association between the geographic location of a settlement and the value for the linguistic feature of interest (or if we have no information about the geography whatsoever), the most simple method is to sample at random. We randomly drew n s out of the N s settlements and counted the number n c of categories discovered in the sampling.

k -means clustering. This method (Lloyd, Reference Lloyd1982) uses a pre-specified number of clusters. It starts with k randomly chosen clusters and iterates searching for the mutually exclusive set of clusters of spherical shape based on a similarity measure. In our case, we used geographic distance as the parameter to build the clusters of settlements, and we built k = n s clusters. After this, we randomly chose one settlement inside each cluster, forming in this way our sample of n s settlements. The different categories in this sample were our result n c .

Hierarchical clustering. This method (Ward, Reference Ward1963) ranks the elements of a set according to their similarity (we used Euclidean distance), and builds a dendrogram (tree-like plot). Then, it clusters the different subgroups according to their grouping in the dendrogram. The total number of clusters can be either selected a priori or data driven. We used the former option here. We again used geographic distances to cluster settlements, and set the number of clusters to n s . As in the previous case, we randomly chose one settlement as a representative of each cluster, forming our sample of n s settlements. The different categories in this sample were our result n c .

4. Results and discussion

4.1. Simulated data

Figure 2 shows the results of applying the three different clustering algorithms to our simulated data. The plots show the discovery fraction $df = {{{n_c}} \over {{N_c}}}$ as a function of the proportion of settlements sampled ${{{n_s}} \over {{N_s}}}$ for different values of total number of categories and spatial configuration. Each column of plots shows the results for a different value of the total number of categories N c from 3 to 9, while each row of plots shows a different spatial configuration: circular equidistant, center–periphery, dialect chain, and uniform. Each group was approximated with a logistic regression line.

Figure 2. Results for the discovery fraction as a function of the settlement sample fraction for different values of the parameters. We can see a clear improvement in the discovery fraction when using clustering algorithms for the data with spatial structure (rows 1–3) and no improvement or depreciation in performance for the cases with no spatial structure (last row).

From the rows 1–3 in Figure 2 we can see that in the cases with spatial structure (configurations circular equidistant, center–periphery, and dialect chain) there was a clear improvement of the clustering methods over random sampling, the hierarchical clustering consistently performing slightly better than the k-means clustering. This improvement in the discovery rate was more evident for the cases with the higher quantity of categories N c , and the effect was different for different spatial configurations: it was the most prominent for the dialect chain configuration, followed by equidistant, and finally center–periphery.

From the last row, we see that in the cases of data with no spatial structure (uniform), the performance of all three sampling methods was practically the same: there was no improvement (and also no depreciation) in the performance when choosing a spatial clustering algorithm over a random sampling.

We now want to study how the count configuration Q affected our results. Shannon entropy (Shannon, Reference Shannon1948), defined as

(1) $$H(Q) = - \sum\limits_{i = 1}^n {P({q_i}) \cdot {{log }_2}P({q_i})} $$

gives us an idea of how evenly distributed counts in the different categories are, for a count configuration of the form Q = (q 1 , …, q n ), where P(q i ) is the probability of finding the i-th value of Q in each settlement. If the values are evenly distributed across all categories, the value of entropy will be higher, while it will be lower if the distribution is skewed. Going back to a previous example of N s = 50 settlements and N c = 5 categories, the most even count configuration, with 10 settlements in each category, Q even = (10,10,10,10,10), has an entropy H(Q even) = 3.32, while the most uneven count configuration with all categories populated, Q uneven = (46,1,1,1,1), has an entropy H(Q uneven) = 0.56.Footnote 3

In Figure 3, we plotted the discovery fraction as a function of normalized Shannon entropy h = H/H max of the count configuration Q, for different values of the spatial configuration, clustering method, and total number of categories N c . Plots were aggregated in the settlement fraction sampled. In this figure, we can see several behaviors. First, for each spatial configuration and clustering method, the discovery fraction increased with entropy. This is what we expected, since the more evenly the categories were distributed in settlements, the easier it was to discover more categories. We can also see how, when we increased the number of categories N c , the overall curve decreased and moved to the right. This means, on the one hand, that it is harder to discover a large fraction of categories if there are more of them, and that the higher N c , the larger configurations space is, and therefore the higher the possible values of entropy.

Figure 3. Results for the discovery fraction as a function of entropy. We can see a clear improvement in the discovery fraction when there is a higher value of entropy, although the obtained results depend on the number of categories.

4.2. Real data: Circassian languages

In Figures 4 and 5, we can see the results for the discovery rate as a function of the settlement sample fraction, for the Circassian dialect recognition, and reflex of Circassian *qh. Shadowed dots are the jittered values for each individual observation. We can see how hierarchical clustering had the highest performance, followed by the k-means clustering, while the random sampling performed the worst for both cases. This is consistent with the behavior observed for the simulated data discussed above.

Figure 4. Discovery rate as a function of settlement sample fraction for Circassian dialect data (eight categories).

Figure 5. Discovery rate as a function of settlement sample fraction for Circassian reflex of *qh (four categories).

4.3. Overall results

As we can see from Figures 25, our algorithm worked better than random sampling in all cases. It is worth mentioning the obvious fact visible through our analysis that the number of categories influenced the discovery rate. If a researcher sampled around 90 percent of the data, they will discover nearly all of the present variation. However, if the sample is smaller, than the value where both approaches (clustering and random sampling) converge and all variation is found depends on the number of categories N c . For example, from Figure 2 we can see that if our variable had three categories, then both approaches converged near 50 percent, but if our variable had nine categories, then the approaches would not converge until almost all settlements were sampled. We can also see this behavior for the case of the Circassian languages: The stabilization of the results (100 percent discovery rate for all methods) was reached at a lower sampling factor when the reflex of *qh was studied (Figure 5, four categories) than when the dialect was investigated (Figure 4, eight categories). Another fact easily visible through our analysis is that it was easier to discover variables with evenly distributed frequencies. From Figure 3, we can see that the higher discovery rate corresponded with higher values of entropy. We can also see that the increase in the number of categories made it harder to discover all possible values; however it was easier to discover nine evenly distributed categories than three hardly skewed ones. The consequence of this could also be turned around: if the researcher discovered a given number of categories in a large amount of settlements, there is always a possibility that the variable under investigation is skewed and that there are really more rare values of this variable to discover. This uncertainty cannot be avoided by any sampling method, but it can be estimated by generating simulated data, as in this study.

5. Conclusion

This paper proposes a solution to the problem of sampling settlements in the limited conditions where it is not possible to collect fieldwork questionnaires from every single location. We performed two studies: First, we simulated data with different spatial and count configurations, as well as different number of categories, and compared the results from our algorithm with the random sampling. For all spatial configurations, our algorithm discovers more variation than random sampling. Second, we tested our algorithm with two different linguistic features from Circassian languages. For both the results are the same: hierarchical clustering performed the best, k-means slightly worse, and random sampling the worst. In a case with no spatial structure (uniform configuration), our algorithm performs exactly the same as random sampling. We also showed that not all variables are equal: It is harder to discover the variation of those with lower entropy, as expected. Our recommendation to the field linguist is to follow this algorithm: Estimate the number of settlements n s that they can visit, then perform clustering of all settlements, and finally, randomly sample one location from the n s clusters obtained from the clustering process. During the work on this paper, we wrote an R code for creating different spatial relationships between datapoints (circular equidistant, center–periphery, dialect chain, and random) that could be useful for other projects where spatial relations are important.

Acknowledgments

Both authors contributed equally. We would like to thank the members of the Linguistic Convergence Laboratory (HSE University) for useful comments in the early stage of this paper. Ezequiel Koile’s work was funded by the Department of Linguistic and Cultural Evolution, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. George Moroz has received funding from the Basic Research Program at the HSE University.

Competing interests

The authors declare none.

Footnotes

Both authors contributed equally to the manuscript.

2 Strictly speaking, our mixture zones are regions where villages with two or more values of the feature of interest coexist, but the value is unique for each village, while the mixed zone in the citation refers to a region where a mixed variety is spoken.

3 The extreme configuration Q extreme = (50,0,0,0,0) has H(Q extreme) = 0.

References

Chambers, J. K. & Trudgill, P.. 2004. Dialectology, 2nd edn. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Delmelle, E. 2009. Spatial sampling. In Stewart Fotheringham, A. and Rogerson, Peter A. (eds.), The SAGE handbook of spatial analysis, 165186. London: SAGE Publications.Google Scholar
Dorian, N. C. 2010. Investigating variation: The effects of social organization and social setting. Oxford: Oxford University Press.10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195385939.001.0001CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fox, J. & Weisberg, S.. 2018. An R companion to applied regression. London: SAGE Publications.Google Scholar
Goossens, J. 1977. Deutsche Dialektologie, vol. 2205. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter.10.1515/9783110853889CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hankin, R. K. S. 2006. Additive integer partitions in R. Journal of Statistical Software, Code Snippets 16. doi: 10.18637/jss.v016.c01.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Labov, W. 1963. The social motivation of a sound change. Word 19(3). 273309.10.1080/00437956.1963.11659799CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leemann, A., Jeszenszky, P., Steiner, C., Studerus, M., & Messerli, J.. 2020. Linguistic fieldwork in a pandemic: Supervised data collection combining smartphone recordings and videoconferencing. Linguistics Vanguard, 6(s3). doi: 10.1515/lingvan-2020-0061.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lloyd, S. P. 1982. Least square quantization in PCM. IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, 28(2). 129137.10.1109/TIT.1982.1056489CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moroz, G. 2017. lingtypology: easy mapping for Linguistic Typology. Retrieved from https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=lingtypology (March 28, 2024).Google Scholar
Moroz, G. 2021. Some questions of Circassian segmental and suprasegmental phonology and phonetics. Ph.D dissertation. Moscow: National Research University Higher School of Economics.Google Scholar
Moroz, G. & Verhees, S.. 2019. Variability in noun classes assignment in Zilo Andi: Experimental data. Iran and the Caucasus 23(3). 268282.10.1163/1573384X-20190306CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nikolaev, D. 2019. Areal dependency of consonant inventories. Language Dynamics and Change 9(1). 104126.10.1163/22105832-00901001CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Piller, I., Zhang, J., & Li, J.. 2020. Linguistic diversity in a time of crisis: Language challenges of the covid-19 pandemic. Multilingua 39(5). 503515.10.1515/multi-2020-0136CrossRefGoogle Scholar
R Core Team. 2021. R: A language and environment for statistical computing. Vienna: R Foundation for Statistical Computing.Google Scholar
Shannon, C. E. 1948. A mathematical theory of communication. Bell System Technical Journal 27(3). 379423.10.1002/j.1538-7305.1948.tb01338.xCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sprouse, J. 2011. A validation of Amazon Mechanical Turk for the collection of acceptability judgments in linguistic theory. Behavior Research Methods 43(1). 155167.10.3758/s13428-010-0039-7CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Staff, P. O. 2019. Correction: Talk2Me: Automated linguistic data collection for personal assessment. PLoS ONE 14(4). e0216375. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0216375.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stehman, S. V. & Overton, W. S.. 1995. Spatial sampling. In Arlinghaus, S. (ed.), Practical handbook of spatial statistics, 3163. Boca Raton: CRC Press.Google Scholar
Ward, J. H. Jr 1963. Hierarchical grouping to optimize an objective function. Journal of the American Statistical Association 58(301). 236244.10.1080/01621459.1963.10500845CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wickham, H., Averick, M., Bryan, J., Chang, W., McGowan, L. D., François, R., Grolemund, G., Hayes, A., Henry, L., Hester, J., Kuhn, M., Pedersen, T. L., Miller, E., Bache, S. M., Müller, K., Ooms, J., Robinson, D., Seidel, D. P., Spinu, V., Takahashi, K., Vaughan, D., Wilke, C., Woo, K., & Yutani, H.. 2019. Welcome to the tidyverse. Journal of Open Source Software 4(43). 1686. doi: 10.21105/joss.01686.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. (a) Circular equidistant, (b) center–periphery, (c) dialect chain, and (d) uniform distributions for Ns = 117 settlements distributed in Nc = 6 categories, with a count configuration Q = (42,21,19,13,11,11) and r = 26. In (a), the distributions’ centers form a regular hexagon. In (b), the most populated category lies in the origin, while the other centers form a regular pentagon around it. In (c), they form a straight line. In (d), all centers coincide at the origin. The dots within each category are surrounded with their normal ellipses (Fox and Weisberg, 2018). The centers around which the data are generated in (a) and (b) form regular polygons, while the polygons showed here link the centroids of the generated data a posteriori and are therefore not regular. Similarly, the dialect chain in (c) does not form a horizontal segment, although the centers for data generation did.

Figure 1

Map 1. Distribution of dialects in the Circassian settlements.

Figure 2

Map 2. The distribution of Circassian reflex of *qh.

Figure 3

Figure 2. Results for the discovery fraction as a function of the settlement sample fraction for different values of the parameters. We can see a clear improvement in the discovery fraction when using clustering algorithms for the data with spatial structure (rows 1–3) and no improvement or depreciation in performance for the cases with no spatial structure (last row).

Figure 4

Figure 3. Results for the discovery fraction as a function of entropy. We can see a clear improvement in the discovery fraction when there is a higher value of entropy, although the obtained results depend on the number of categories.

Figure 5

Figure 4. Discovery rate as a function of settlement sample fraction for Circassian dialect data (eight categories).

Figure 6

Figure 5. Discovery rate as a function of settlement sample fraction for Circassian reflex of *qh (four categories).