Variable rules analysis (original) (raw)

About DBpedia

In linguistics, variable rules analysis is a set of statistical analysis methods commonly used in sociolinguistics and historical linguistics to describe patterns of variation between alternative forms in language use. It is also sometimes known as Varbrul analysis, after the name of a software package dedicated to carrying out the relevant statistical computations (Varbrul, from "variable rule"). The method goes back to a theoretical approach developed by the sociolinguist William Labov in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and its mathematical implementation was developed by Henrietta Cedergren and David Sankoff in 1974.

Property Value
dbo:abstract In linguistics, variable rules analysis is a set of statistical analysis methods commonly used in sociolinguistics and historical linguistics to describe patterns of variation between alternative forms in language use. It is also sometimes known as Varbrul analysis, after the name of a software package dedicated to carrying out the relevant statistical computations (Varbrul, from "variable rule"). The method goes back to a theoretical approach developed by the sociolinguist William Labov in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and its mathematical implementation was developed by Henrietta Cedergren and David Sankoff in 1974. A variable rules analysis is designed to provide a quantitative model of a situation where speakers alternate between different forms that have the same meaning and stand in free variation, but in such a way that the probability of choice of either the one or the other form is conditioned by a variety of context factors or social characteristics. Such a situation, where variation is not entirely random but rule-governed, is also known as "structured variation". A variable rules analysis computes a multivariate statistical model, on the basis of observed token counts, such that each determining factor is assigned a numerical factor weight that describes how it influences the probabilities of choice of either form. This is done by means of stepwise logistic regression, using a maximum likelihood algorithm. Although the necessary computations required for a variable rules analysis can be carried out with the help of mainstream general-purpose statistics software packages such as SPSS, it is more often done by means of a specialised software dedicated to the needs of linguists, called Varbrul. It was originally written by David Sankoff and currently exists in freeware implementations for Mac OS and Microsoft Windows, under the title of Goldvarb X. There are also versions implemented in the statistical language R and therefore available on most platforms. These include R-Varb and Rbrul. Variable rules approaches are commonly employed for the analysis of data in sociolinguistic research, especially in studies that aim to investigate how reflexes of linguistic change through time appear in the shape of structured variation patterns within a speech community. (en)
dbo:wikiPageID 3656587 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength 3461 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID 1091337733 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink dbr:Multivariate_analysis dbr:David_Sankoff dbr:SPSS dbc:Logistic_regression dbr:Mac_OS dbc:Linguistic_research_software dbr:William_Labov dbr:Logistic_regression dbr:Historical_linguistics dbr:Stepwise_regression dbc:Sociolinguistics dbr:Diaphoneme dbr:Free_variation dbr:Freeware dbr:Microsoft_Windows dbr:R_(programming_language) dbr:Maximum_likelihood dbr:Variation_(linguistics) dbr:Sociolinguistics dbr:Statistical_analysis
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate dbt:Sociolinguistics-stub dbt:Comp-ling-stub
dct:subject dbc:Logistic_regression dbc:Linguistic_research_software dbc:Sociolinguistics
gold:hypernym dbr:Set
rdfs:comment In linguistics, variable rules analysis is a set of statistical analysis methods commonly used in sociolinguistics and historical linguistics to describe patterns of variation between alternative forms in language use. It is also sometimes known as Varbrul analysis, after the name of a software package dedicated to carrying out the relevant statistical computations (Varbrul, from "variable rule"). The method goes back to a theoretical approach developed by the sociolinguist William Labov in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and its mathematical implementation was developed by Henrietta Cedergren and David Sankoff in 1974. (en)
rdfs:label Variable rules analysis (en)
owl:sameAs freebase:Variable rules analysis wikidata:Variable rules analysis http://bn.dbpedia.org/resource/পরিবর্তনশীল_নিয়ম_বিশ্লেষণ https://global.dbpedia.org/id/4xeY7 yago-res:Variable rules analysis
prov:wasDerivedFrom wikipedia-en:Variable_rules_analysis?oldid=1091337733&ns=0
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf wikipedia-en:Variable_rules_analysis
is dbo:knownFor of dbr:David_Sankoff
is dbo:wikiPageRedirects of dbr:Varbrul dbr:Variation_analysis dbr:VARBRUL
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of dbr:David_Sankoff dbr:Contrastive_distribution dbr:Sali_Tagliamonte dbr:VARB dbr:Diaphoneme dbr:Axiom_of_categoricity dbr:Free_variation dbr:Variation_(linguistics) dbr:New_Ways_of_Analyzing_Variation dbr:New_Ways_of_Analyzing_Variation_Asia-Pacific dbr:List_of_statistics_articles dbr:Outline_of_machine_learning dbr:Shana_Poplack dbr:Varbrul dbr:Variation_analysis dbr:VARBRUL
is foaf:primaryTopic of wikipedia-en:Variable_rules_analysis