Producer | Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History (Germany) |
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Languages | English |
Access | |
Cost | Free |
Coverage | |
Disciplines | Quantitative comparative linguistics |
Links | |
Website | asjp |
The Automated Similarity Judgment Program (ASJP) is a collaborative project applying computational approaches to comparative linguistics using a database of word lists. The database is open access and consists of 40-item basic-vocabulary lists for well over half of the world's languages.[1] It is continuously being expanded. In addition to isolates and languages of demonstrated genealogical groups, the database includes pidgins, creoles, mixed languages, and constructed languages. Words of the database are transcribed into a simplified standard orthography (ASJPcode).[2] The database has been used to estimate dates at which language families have diverged into daughter languages by a method related to but still different from glottochronology,[3] to determine the homeland (Urheimat) of a proto-language,[4] to investigate sound symbolism,[5] to evaluate different phylogenetic methods,[6] and several other purposes.
ASJP is not widely accepted among historical linguists as an adequate method to establish or evaluate relationships between language families.[7]
It is part of the Cross-Linguistic Linked Data project hosted by the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.[8]