98%
921
2 minutes
20
In multilingual societies, it is common to encounter different language varieties. Various approaches have been proposed to discuss different mechanisms of language shift. However, current models exploring language shift in languages in contact often overlook the influence of language ideologies. Language ideologies play a crucial role in understanding language usage within a cultural community, encompassing shared beliefs, assumptions, and feelings toward specific language forms. These ideologies shed light on the social perceptions of different language varieties expressed as language attitudes. In this study, we introduce an approach that incorporates language ideologies into a model for contact varieties by considering speaker preferences as a parameter. Our findings highlight the significance of preference in language shift, which can even outweigh the influence of language prestige associated, for example, with a standard variety. Furthermore, we investigate the impact of the degree of interaction between individuals holding opposing preferences on the language shift process. Quite expectedly, our results indicate that when communities with different preferences mix, the coexistence of language varieties becomes less likely. However, variations in the degree of interaction between individuals with contrary preferences notably lead to non-trivial transitions from states of coexistence of varieties to the extinction of a given variety, followed by a return to coexistence, ultimately culminating in the dominance of the previously extinct variety. By studying finite-size effects, we observe that the duration of coexistence states increases exponentially with the network size. Ultimately, our work constitutes a quantitative approach to the study of language ideologies in sociolinguistics.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0166636 | DOI Listing |
J Pers Soc Psychol
August 2025
Department of Cognitive and Psychological Sciences, Brown University.
The current state of political polarization in the United States encompasses a growing divide between partisans and a shift toward more extreme ideologies. Although rising ideological extremism poses societal challenges, the mechanisms supporting extreme views remain uncharacterized. Leveraging a combination of neurophysiological methods, we show that regardless of which side of the political aisle an individual is on, those with more extreme views show heightened neural activity to politically charged content in brain regions implicated in affective processing-including the amygdala, periaqueductal gray, and posterior superior temporal sulcus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFQual Health Res
August 2025
Department of Sociology, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand.
Language communication in caregiving between care recipients and care workers is essential for the well-being and overall care experiences of both parties. However, challenges arise in language communication when care workers and/or recipients are linguistic minorities. With the increasing reliance on migrant workforces in the care industry globally, language communication challenges require careful attention.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pers Soc Psychol
August 2025
Department of Management and Marketing, Faculty of Business, Hong Kong Polytechnic University.
Recent polls suggest conservatives are more likely than liberals to support bans on politicized practices, even when both groups view the practice as similarly immoral (e.g., abortion opposition among pro-life conservatives vs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrauma Violence Abuse
August 2025
Southern Cross University, Gold Coast, QLD, Australia.
The human rights challenges faced by Queer youth in out-of-home care (OOHC), such as foster and residential care, have largely been overlooked in child protection research, policy, and practice development. This systematic scoping review aims to identify and synthesize the existing international, English-language, empirical research documenting the human rights challenges experienced by Queer youth in OOHC systems. This review followed the Joanna Briggs Institute methodological guidance for scoping reviews.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTeach Learn Med
August 2025
Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Hanover, NH, USA.
Health professions education (HPE) institutions in the United States (US) are increasingly calling for health justice for 'historically excluded' groups. However, the language and concepts within many HPE equity frameworks offer insufficient attunement to historically-informed, locally-relevant lived expertise of racialized healthcare trauma. These present-bound, race-based, frameworks obscure the distinct and generationally-transmitted healthcare inequities borne by foundationally minoritized populations - the modern-day descendants of Indigenous and/or enslaved people whose land and labor have been continuously stolen throughout a colonized nation's history since its first founding settlements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF