Phonological distances for linguistic typology and the origin of Indo-European languages

April 13, 2026 ยท Grace Period ยท + Add venue

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Authors Marius Mavridis, Juan De Gregorio, Raul Toral, David Sanchez arXiv ID 2604.11565 Category cs.CL: Computation & Language Cross-listed cond-mat.stat-mech, cs.IT, physics.soc-ph Citations 0
Abstract
We show that short-range phoneme dependencies encode large-scale patterns of linguistic relatedness, with direct implications for quantitative typology and evolutionary linguistics. Specifically, using an information-theoretic framework, we argue that phoneme sequences modeled as second-order Markov chains essentially capture the statistical correlations of a phonological system. This finding enables us to quantify distances among 67 modern languages from a multilingual parallel corpus employing a distance metric that incorporates articulatory features of phonemes. The resulting phonological distance matrix recovers major language families and reveals signatures of contact-induced convergence. Remarkably, we obtain a clear correlation with geographic distance, allowing us to constrain a plausible homeland region for the Indo-European family, consistent with the Steppe hypothesis.
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