@inproceedings{jager-2025-beyond,
title = "Beyond cognacy",
author = {J{\"a}ger, Gerhard},
editor = "Hahn, Michael and
Rani, Priya and
Kumar, Ritesh and
Shcherbakov, Andreas and
Sorokin, Alexey and
Serikov, Oleg and
Cotterell, Ryan and
Vylomova, Ekaterina",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 7th Workshop on Research in Computational Linguistic Typology and Multilingual NLP",
month = aug,
year = "2025",
address = "Vinenna. Austria",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://preview.aclanthology.org/acl25-workshop-ingestion/2025.sigtyp-1.6/",
pages = "52--60",
ISBN = "979-8-89176-281-7",
abstract = "Computational phylogenetics has become an established tool in historical linguistics, with many language families now analyzed using likelihood-based inference. However, standard approaches rely on expert-annotated cognate sets, which are sparse, labor-intensive to produce, and limited to individual language families. This paper explores alternatives by comparing the established method to two fully automated methods that extract phylogenetic signal directly from lexical data. One uses automatic cognate clustering with unigram/concept features; the other applies multiple sequence alignment (MSA) derived from a pair-hidden Markov model. Both are evaluated against expert classifications from Glottolog and typological data from Grambank. Also, the intrinsic strengths of the phylogenetic signal in the characters are compared. Results show that MSA-based inference yields trees more consistent with linguistic classifications, better predicts typological variation, and provides a clearer phylogenetic signal, suggesting it as a promising, scalable alternative to traditional cognate-based methods. This opens new avenues for global-scale language phylogenies beyond expert annotation bottlenecks."
}
Markdown (Informal)
[Beyond cognacy](https://preview.aclanthology.org/acl25-workshop-ingestion/2025.sigtyp-1.6/) (Jäger, SIGTYP 2025)
ACL
- Gerhard Jäger. 2025. Beyond cognacy. In Proceedings of the 7th Workshop on Research in Computational Linguistic Typology and Multilingual NLP, pages 52–60, Vinenna. Austria. Association for Computational Linguistics.