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It was recently suggested in a study published in Nature Human Behaviour that the historical loosening of American culture was associated with a trade-off between higher creativity and lower order. To this end, Jackson et al. generate a linguistic index of cultural tightness based on the Google Books Ngram corpus and use this index to show that American norms loosened between 1800 and 2000. While we remain agnostic toward a potential loosening of American culture and a statistical association with creativity/order, we show here that the methods used by Jackson et al. are neither suitable for testing the validity of the index nor for establishing possible relationships with creativity/order.
Der folgende Leitfaden bietet eine grundlegende Übersicht darüber, welche Schritte bei der Konzeption und Durchführung einer empirischen Untersuchung in der germanistischen Linguistik zu beachten sind. Wir werden den grundlegenden Ablauf und die zugrunde liegenden Konzepte allgemein bzw. modellhaft beschreiben und sie anhand von einfachen Beispielen illustrieren. Eine stärkere Ausgestaltung anhand von Beispielen zu verschiedenen linguistischen Forschungsfragen und -feldern und damit auch mehr Illustrationen, wie die einzelnen Schritte für bestimmte Forschungsfragen umzusetzen sind, finden Sie in den Fallstudien im —> Teil III dieses Bandes. Detailliertere Ausführungen zu den zentralen Konzepten des empirischen Arbeitens in der Linguistik finden Sie in —> Teil VI dieses Bandes. Weiterführende Literatur findet sich am Ende des Beitrags.
In a previous study published in Nature Human Behaviour, Varnum and Grossmann claim that reductions in gender inequality are linked to reductions in pathogen prevalence in the United States between 1951 and 2013. Since the statistical methods used by Varnum and Grossmann are known to induce (seemingly) significant correlations between unrelated time series, so-called spurious or non-sense correlations, we test here whether the statistical association between gender inequality and pathogens prevalence in its current form also is the result of mis-specified models that do not correctly account for the temporal structure of the data. Our analysis clearly suggests that this is the case. We then discuss and apply several standard approaches of modelling time-series processes in the data and show that there is, at least as of now, no support for a statistical association between gender inequality and pathogen prevalence.
In a recent article, Meylan and Griffiths (Meylan & Griffiths, 2021, henceforth, M&G) focus their attention on the significant methodological challenges that can arise when using large-scale linguistic corpora. To this end, M&G revisit a well-known result of Piantadosi, Tily, and Gibson (2011, henceforth, PT&G) who argue that average information content is a better predictor of word length than word frequency. We applaud M&G who conducted a very important study that should be read by any researcher interested in working with large-scale corpora. The fact that M&G mostly failed to find clear evidence in favor of PT&G's main finding motivated us to test PT&G's idea on a subset of the largest archive of German language texts designed for linguistic research, the German Reference Corpus consisting of ∼43 billion words. We only find very little support for the primary data point reported by PT&G.