from Part II - Language
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 November 2024
Degree is the simplest of the node-level measures, but its simplicity often hides its power. Here we will apply degree to the problem of mental structure. Specifically, what is the structure of the relationships between information in the mind? George Kingsley Zipf observed that word frequencies in natural language tend to a follow a scale-free distribution: The most frequent words are few, while the less frequent words are many with a specific linear relationship on a log-log plot. It has also been suggested that this power-law distribution applies to the relationships between words as well as to their meanings. Some words share meanings with many other words while others share few. This is a hypothesis based on the structural distribution of shared meanings, or polysemy (words with multiple meanings). This chapter will explain the theory underlying Zipf’s law of meaning and power laws. It will also show how we can combine these ideas with the most basic node-level network measure: degree.
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