A Note of Zipf's Law, Natural Languages, and Noncoding DNA Regions


Autoria(s): Niyogi, Partha; Berwick, Robert C.
Data(s)

08/10/2004

08/10/2004

01/03/1995

Resumo

In Phys. Rev. Letters (73:2), Mantegna et al. conclude on the basis of Zipf rank frequency data that noncoding DNA sequence regions are more like natural languages than coding regions. We argue on the contrary that an empirical fit to Zipf"s "law" cannot be used as a criterion for similarity to natural languages. Although DNA is a presumably "organized system of signs" in Mandelbrot"s (1961) sense, and observation of statistical featurs of the sort presented in the Mantegna et al. paper does not shed light on the similarity between DNA's "gramar" and natural language grammars, just as the observation of exact Zipf-like behavior cannot distinguish between the underlying processes of tossing an M-sided die or a finite-state branching process.

Formato

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Identificador

AIM-1530

http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/6634

Idioma(s)

en_US

Relação

AIM-1530