HOME   ::   Back to the Paper   ::   References

Mukherjee, A. (2007) Self-Organization of the Sound Inventories: An Explanation based on Complex Networks. Technical report, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur, India.

References (may not be complete)  [Original format]  [Sort by year]  [Sort by author]  [Sort by citations]

[1] D. M. Abrams and S. H. Strogatz. 2003. Modelling the dynamics of language death. Nature 424, 900.

Google UIUC

[2] R. Albert and A.-L. BarabŽasi. 2002. Statistical mechanics of complex networks. Reviews of Modern Physics 74, 47-97.

Google

[3] P. Arhem, H. A. Braun, M. T. Huber and H. Liljenstrom. 2004. Micro-Meso-Macro: Addressing complex systems couplings, World Scientific.

Google

[4] A.-L. BarabŽasi and R. Albert. 1999. Emergence of scaling in random networks. Science 286, 509-512.

Google

[5] J. Blevins. 2004. Evolutionary phonology: The emergence of sound patterns, Cambridge University Press.

Google

[6] B. Boer. 2000. Self-organisation in vowel systems. Journal of Phonetics 28(4), 441-465.

Google UIUC

[7] P. Boersma. 1998. Functional phonology, Doctoral thesis, University of Amsterdam, The Hague: Holland Academic Graphics.

Google

[8] M. G. Bulmer. 1979. Principles of statistics, Mathematics.

Google

[9] R. Ferrer i Cancho and R. V. SolŽe. 2001. The small-world of human language. Santa Fe working paper 01-03-016.

Google UIUC

[10] J. Coates. 1993. Women, men and language, London: Longman.

Google

[11] N. Clements. 2004. Features and sound inventories. Symposium on Phonological Theory: Representations and Architecture, CUNY.

Google

[12] G. W. Flake, S. R. Lawrence, C. L. Giles, and F. M. Coetzee. 2002. Self-organization and identification of web communities. IEEE Computer, 35, 66-71.

Google

[13] E. Flemming. 2002. Auditory representations in phonology, New York and London: Routledge.

Google

[14] G. Frege. 1923. Logische Untersuchungen (Dritter Teil: Gedankenfšuge, Beitršage zur Philosophie des Deutschen Idealismus, Oxford, UK: Basil Blackwell.

Google

[15] A.W. de Groot. 1931. Phonologie und phonetik als funktionswissenschaften. Travaux du Cercle Linguistique de, Prague 4, 116-147.

Google

[16] F. Hinskens and J. Weijer. 2003. Patterns of segmental modification in consonant inventories: A cross-linguistic study. Linguistics 41, 6.

Google

[17] P. Holme, M. Huss, and H. Jeong. 2003. Subnetwork hierarchies of biochemical pathways. Bioinformatics 19, 532-538.

Google

[18] H. Jeong, B. Tombor, R. Albert, Z. N. Oltvai, and A. L. BarabŽasi. 2000. The large-scale organization of metabolic networks. Nature 406, 651-654.

Google

[19] B. W. Kernighan and S. Lin. 1970. An efficient heuristic procedure for partitioning graphs. Bell System Technical Journal, 49, 291-307.

Google

[20] P. Ladefoged and I. Maddieson. 1996. Sounds of the worlds languages, Oxford: Blackwell.

Google

[21] D. Lightfoot. 1999. The development of language: Acquisition, change and evolution, Oxford: Blackwell.

Google UIUC

[22] B. Lindblom and I. Maddieson. 1988. Phonetic universals in consonant systems. Language, Speech, and Mind, 62-78, Routledge, London.

Google

[23] I. Maddieson. 1984. Patterns of sounds, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Google

[24] I. Maddieson. 1999. In search of universals. Proceedings of the XIVth International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, 2521-2528.

Google

[25] A. Martinet 1955. `Economie des changements phonŽetiques, Berne: A. Francke.

Google

[26] M. E. J. Newman. 2001. Scientific collaboration networks. Phys. Rev. E 64.

Google

[27] M. E. J. Newman. 2003. The structure and function of complex networks. SIAM Review 45, 167-256.

Google

[28] M. E. J. Newman and M. Girvan. 2004. Finding and evaluating community structure in networks. Phys. Rev. E 69, 026113.

Google

[29] P. Oudeyer. 2006. Self-organization in the evolution of speech, Oxford University Press.

Google UIUC

[30] V. Pericliev and R. E. ValdŽes-PŽerez. 2002. Differentiating 451 languages in terms of their segment inventories. Studia Linguistica 56(1), 1-27.

Google

[31] A. Pothen, H. Simon, and K.-P. Liou. 1990. Partitioning sparse matrices with eigenvectors of graphs. SIAM J. Matrix Anal. Appl., 11, 430-452.

Google

[32] F. Radicchi, C. Castellano, F. Cecconi, V. Loreto, and D. Parisi. 2003. Defining and identifying communities in networks. PNAS, 101(9), 2658-2663.

Google

[33] J. J. Ramasco, S. N. Dorogovtsev and R. Pastor-Satorras. 2004. Self-organization of collaboration networks. Physical Review E 70, 036106.

Google

[34] J. Scott. 2000. Social network analysis: A handbook, Sage, London, 2nd edition.

Google

[35] C. E. Shannon and W. Weaver. 1949. The mathematical theory of information, Urbana: University of Illinois Press.

Google

[36] H. A. Simon. 1955. On a class of skew distribution functions. Biometrika 42, 425-440.

Google

[37] N. Trubetzkoy. 1930. Die phonologische systeme. TCLP, 4, 96-116.

Google

[38] N. Trubetzkoy. 1969. Principles of phonology. (English translation of Grundzšuge der Phonologie, 1939), Berkeley: University of California Press.

Google

[39] M. S. Vitevitch. 2005. Phonological neighbors in a small world: What can graph theory tell us about word learning? Spring 2005 Talk Series on Networks and Complex Systems, Indiana University, Bloomington.

Google

[40] S. Yook, H. Jeong and A.-L. BarabŽasi. 2001. unpublished.

Google

 HOME   ::   Back to the Paper   ::   References Comments to: junwang4 you-know-at gmail.com Last update: 2/3/09