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George Kingsley Zipf

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Nationality
  
American

Education
  
Harvard College (1930)

Name
  
George Zipf


Known for
  
Zipf's law

Alma mater
  
Harvard College

Fields
  
Statistics, Linguistics

George Kingsley Zipf httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonscc

Born
  
January 7, 1902 Freeport, Illinois (
1902-01-07
)

Died
  
September 25, 1950, Newton, Massachusetts, United States

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Natural Sciences, US & Canada

Books
  
Human behavior and the p, The psycho‑biology of langua, Selected Studies of the Princi

5 loi rang taille george kingsley zipf


George Kingsley Zipf (; 1902–1950), was an American linguist and philologist who studied statistical occurrences in different languages.

Contents

George Kingsley Zipf Meet Harvard Professor George Kingsley Zipf an American linguist

Zipf earned his bachelors, masters, and doctoral degrees from Harvard University, although he also studied at the University of Bonn and the University of Berlin. He was Chairman of the German Department and University Lecturer (meaning he could teach any subject he chose) at Harvard University. He worked with Chinese and demographics, and much of his effort can explain properties of the Internet, distribution of income within nations, and many other collections of data.

Zipf's law

George Kingsley Zipf is the eponym of Zipf's law, which states that while only a few words are used very often, many or most are used rarely,

P n 1 / n a

where Pn is the frequency of a word ranked nth and the exponent a is almost 1. This means that the second item occurs approximately 1/2 as often as the first, and the third item 1/3 as often as the first, and so on. Zipf's discovery of this law in 1935 was one of the first academic studies of word frequency.

Although he originally intended it as a model for linguistics, Zipf later generalized his law to other disciplines. In particular, he observed that the rank vs. frequency distribution of individual incomes in a unified nation approximates this law, and in his 1941 book, "National Unity and Disunity" he theorized that breaks in this "normal curve of income distribution" portend social pressure for change or revolution.

References

George Kingsley Zipf Wikipedia