Language variation and change in social networks

Language variation and change in social networks

A bipartite approach

Benton, Richard A.; Dodsworth, Robin

Taylor & Francis Ltd

09/2019

206

Dura

Inglês

9781138188891

15 a 20 dias

414

Descrição não disponível.
Chapter 1 Previous approaches to network analysis in sociolinguistics 1.1 Guiding principles and their realization in previous studies 1.2 Assessing previous studies and looking forward Chapter 2 Raleigh, the corpus, and the retreat from the Southern Vowel Shift 2.1 Raleigh: A brief demographic and economic history 2.2 Dialect mixing and leveling 2.3 The Raleigh corpus 2.4 An industrial approach to occupation in Raleigh 2.5 Assessing dialect shift across three generations Chapter 3 Bipartite networks and complex social systems 3.1 Introduction 3.2 Bipartite networks: A formal introduction 3.3 Adapting network methods for bipartite networks 3.4 Bipartite network applications 3.5 Bipartite school co-attendance networks in Raleigh 3.6 The Raleigh network data 3.7 Structural cohesion Chapter 4 Structural equivalence 4.1 Motivation for using structural equivalence in the Raleigh study 4.2 Hypotheses: Network, occupation, and language change 4.3 Calculating structural equivalence 4.4 Testing the hypotheses: QAP regression 4.5 Results 4.6 Discussion Chapter 5Community detection 5.1 Community detection in social networks 5.2 QuanBiMo 5.3 Community detection in the Raleigh network 5.4 Modules in the Raleigh network 5.5 Assessing linguistic variation across modules 5.6 Results 5.7 Conclusions Chapter 6Conclusions 6.1 Summary of findings about language and social network position in Raleigh 6.2 Looking forward: Social meaning, social structure, and types of linguistic variables References
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OLS Regression;Youngest Men;variationist sociolinguistics;Wake Field;LVC;UNC Chapel Hill;language change;Triadic Closure;socioeconomic class;Collar Females;socioeconomic variables;Jaccard Distance;white collar;Dependent Variable Matrix;blue collar;Bipartite Network;sociolinguistic corpora;Equivalence Distance;quantitative analysis;Spearman Rank Order Correlation Tests;microclass;Blue Collar Women;cohesive blocking;Network Strength Scale;Suzanne Evans Wagner;Collar Women;Isabelle Buchstaller;Community Detection;network analysis;Global Clustering Coefficient;working class;Network Clustering Coefficient;Raleigh;African American Vernacular English;Southern Vowel Shift;Jaccard Similarity;sociolinguistic variation;Network Metrics;network variables;Vowel's Duration;nestedness;Graph Theoretic Methods;national vowel changes;Socio-linguistic Studies;White Collar Women;Bipartite Case