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Computational Paremiology: Charting the temporal, ecological dynamics of proverb use in books, news articles, and tweets

E. Davis, C. M. Danforth, W. Mieder, and P. S. Dodds

Times cited: 3

Abstract:

Proverbs are an essential component of language and culture, and though much attention has been paid to their history and currency, there has been comparatively little quantitative work on changes in the frequency with which they are used over time. With wider availability of large corpora reflecting many diverse genres of documents, it is now possible to take a broad and dynamic view of the importance of the proverb. Here, we measure temporal changes in the relevance of proverbs within three corpora, differing in kind, scale, and time frame: Millions of books over centuries; hundreds of millions of news articles over twenty years; and billions of tweets over a decade. We find that proverbs present heavy-tailed frequency-of-usage rank distributions in each venue; exhibit trends reflecting the cultural dynamics of the eras covered; and have evolved into contemporary forms on social media.
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BibTeX:

@Misc{davis2021a,
  author =	 {Davis, Ethan and Danforth, Christopher M. and Mieder, Wolfgang and
                  Dodds, Peter Sheridan},
  title =	 {Computational {P}aremiology: {C}harting the temporal, ecological dynamics of proverb use in books, news articles, and tweets},
  year =	 {2021},
  note =	 {Available online at \href{https://arxiv.org/abs/2107.04929}{https://arxiv.org/abs/2107.04929}},
}

 

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