Articles producció científica> Filologies Romàniques

Quantifying basic colors & apos; salience from cross-linguistic corpora

  • Identification data

    Identifier: imarina:9330061
    Authors:
    Brosa-Rodríguez, AJiménez-López, MD
    Abstract:
    A corpus-based quantitative assessment of Berlin and Kay's proposal is presented. We refine the Basic Color Terms hierarchy proposed by Berlin and Kay, through the concept of salience. A cross-linguistic study with 57 different languages and 136 different linguistic corpora has been conducted. This study uses KonText tool and the corpora included in it. The color labels in different languages have been obtained using a unified methodology from PanLex. We have obtained an individual hierarchy for each of the languages analyzed, as well as a general hierarchy that captures the universal trend. Results show that there is a close relationship between the evolutionary stages in the Berlin and Kay proposal and their frequency in our corpora study, which we could also relate to Zipf's Law. The only color that we certify behaves differently compared to such a proposal is yellow. The main advantage of our approach compared to previous corpora studies is taking into account the anglocentric bias by using a representative typological set of different languages from the world.
  • Others:

    Author, as appears in the article.: Brosa-Rodríguez, A; Jiménez-López, MD
    Department: Filologies Romàniques
    URV's Author/s: Brosa Rodríguez, Antoni / Jiménez López, María Dolores
    Keywords: Universals Terms Terminology Linguistics Color metrics Basic color terms
    Abstract: A corpus-based quantitative assessment of Berlin and Kay's proposal is presented. We refine the Basic Color Terms hierarchy proposed by Berlin and Kay, through the concept of salience. A cross-linguistic study with 57 different languages and 136 different linguistic corpora has been conducted. This study uses KonText tool and the corpora included in it. The color labels in different languages have been obtained using a unified methodology from PanLex. We have obtained an individual hierarchy for each of the languages analyzed, as well as a general hierarchy that captures the universal trend. Results show that there is a close relationship between the evolutionary stages in the Berlin and Kay proposal and their frequency in our corpora study, which we could also relate to Zipf's Law. The only color that we certify behaves differently compared to such a proposal is yellow. The main advantage of our approach compared to previous corpora studies is taking into account the anglocentric bias by using a representative typological set of different languages from the world.
    Thematic Areas: Psicología Optics Odontología Imaging science & photographic technology Human factors and ergonomics Geociências General chemistry General chemical engineering Engineering, chemical Ciencias sociales Chemistry, applied Chemistry (miscellaneous) Chemistry (all) Chemical engineering (miscellaneous) Chemical engineering (all)
    licence for use: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/
    Author's mail: antoni.brosa@urv.cat antoni.brosa@urv.cat mariadolores.jimenez@urv.cat
    Author identifier: 0000-0002-8474-2065 0000-0002-8474-2065 0000-0001-5544-3210
    Record's date: 2024-08-03
    Papper version: info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
    Licence document URL: https://repositori.urv.cat/ca/proteccio-de-dades/
    Papper original source: Color Research And Application. 49 (1): 34-50
    APA: Brosa-Rodríguez, A; Jiménez-López, MD (2024). Quantifying basic colors & apos; salience from cross-linguistic corpora. Color Research And Application, 49(1), 34-50. DOI: 10.1002/col.22899
    Entity: Universitat Rovira i Virgili
    Journal publication year: 2024
    Publication Type: Journal Publications
  • Keywords:

    Chemical Engineering (Miscellaneous),Chemistry (Miscellaneous),Chemistry, Applied,Engineering, Chemical,Human Factors and Ergonomics,Imaging Science & Photographic Technology,Optics
    Universals
    Terms
    Terminology
    Linguistics
    Color metrics
    Basic color terms
    Psicología
    Optics
    Odontología
    Imaging science & photographic technology
    Human factors and ergonomics
    Geociências
    General chemistry
    General chemical engineering
    Engineering, chemical
    Ciencias sociales
    Chemistry, applied
    Chemistry (miscellaneous)
    Chemistry (all)
    Chemical engineering (miscellaneous)
    Chemical engineering (all)
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