SciScoop Science News header image

Getting On Message

Anthropology Tuesday, May 9, 2006 . This is a SciScoop post by David Bradley

  • Share/Bookmark

A team of scientists that included physicists and language researchers at the Weizmann Institute of Science recently investigated this process by applying scientific methods to some of our culture’s most successful models for effective transfer of ideas: classic writings that, by common agreement, get their messages across well.

They created mathematical tools that allowed them to trace the development of ideas throughout a book. The international team included Elisha Moses of the Weizmann Institute’s Physics of Complex Systems Department and Jean-Pierre Eckmann, a frequent visitor from the University of Geneva, as well as postdoctoral fellow Enrique Alvarez Lacalle and research student Beate Dorow from the University of Stuttgart.

Because strings of words are one-dimensional, they literally lack depth. Our minds and memories aid us in recreating complex ideas from this string. The narration ‘encodes’ a hierarchical structure. (An obvious hierarchical structure in a text is chapter-paragraph-sentence). The implication is that our minds decipher the encoded structure, allowing us to comprehend the abstract concept.

To test for an underlying structure in strings of words that are known for their ability to convey ideas, the scientists applied their mathematical tools to a number of books, including writings of Albert Einstein, Mark Twain’s Tom Sawyer, Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka and other classics of different styles and periods. They defined ‘windows of attention’ of around 200 words (about a paragraph) and within these windows, they identified pairs of words that frequently occurred near each other (after eliminating ‘meaningless’ words such as pronouns). From the resulting word lists and the frequencies with which the single words appeared in the text, the scientists’ mathematical analysis was used to construct a sort of network of ‘concept vectors’ – linked words that convey the principle ideas of the text.

Mathematically, these concept vectors can go in many directions, and reading the text can be thought of as a tour along paths in the resulting network. The multidimensional concept vectors seem to span a ‘web of ideas’. The scientists’ work suggests this network is based on a tree-like hierarchy that may be a basic underpinning of language. The reader or listener can reconstruct the hierarchical structure of a text, and thus the multidimensional space of ideas, in his or her mind to grasp ‘the author’s meaning.’

Moses: ‘Philosophers from Wittgenstein to Chomsky have taught us that language plays a central evolutionary role in shaping the human brain, and that revealing the structure of language is an essential step to comprehending brain structure. Our contribution to research in this basic field is in the creation of mathematical tools that can be used to make the connection between concepts or ideas and the words used to express them, making it possible to trace in a speech or text the path of an idea in an abstract mathematical space. We can understand theoretically how the structure of the wording serves to transmit concepts and reconstruct them in the mind of the reader. A deep question that remains open is if and how the correlations we uncovered serve the aesthetics of the text.’

SOURCE: Weizmann Press Release

2 Responses to Getting On Message

apsmith

May 9th, 2006 at 9:30 am

So I wonder if this supports or dismantles the theories of the postmodernists :-) Interesting stuff..

Avatar

gypsysoul

May 11th, 2006 at 9:55 pm

I haven’t checked out Sciscoop in awhile, and look what I find!  Ah, those aesthetics…  how to translate from equation to emotion?

And AP, I hear that the postmodernists are losing steam.  I rather enjoyed the word plays, especially. Makes one wonder what literary stretch awaits around the bend.  (  I miss reading you in the H Times, btw :-)    )

Avatar

Comment Form

About

SciScoop Science News is a forum for news, views and controversial conjectures. Please contact us if would like to submit a guest post.

SciScoop Top Authors