Comparative Analysis of Preference in Contemporary and Earlier Texts Using Entropy Measures

GND
1217812954
Zugehörigkeit
Department of English and American Studies, University of Jena, 07743 Jena, Germany;
Mohseni, Mahdi;
GND
1100898638
ORCID
0000-0002-5220-8319
Zugehörigkeit
Experimental Aesthetics Group, Institute of Anatomy I, Jena University Hospital, University of Jena, 07740 Jena, Germany;
Redies, Christoph;
GND
173663133
ORCID
0000-0002-3034-0052
Zugehörigkeit
Department of English and American Studies, University of Jena, 07743 Jena, Germany;
Gast, Volker

Research in computational textual aesthetics has shown that there are textual correlates of preference in prose texts. The present study investigates whether textual correlates of preference vary across different time periods (contemporary texts versus texts from the 19th and early 20th centuries). Preference is operationalized in different ways for the two periods, in terms of canonization for the earlier texts, and through sales figures for the contemporary texts. As potential textual correlates of preference, we measure degrees of (un)predictability in the distributions of two types of low-level observables, parts of speech and sentence length. Specifically, we calculate two entropy measures, Shannon Entropy as a global measure of unpredictability, and Approximate Entropy as a local measure of surprise (unpredictability in a specific context). Preferred texts from both periods (contemporary bestsellers and canonical earlier texts) are characterized by higher degrees of unpredictability. However, unlike canonicity in the earlier texts, sales figures in contemporary texts are reflected in global (text-level) distributions only (as measured with Shannon Entropy), while surprise in local distributions (as measured with Approximate Entropy) does not have an additional discriminating effect. Our findings thus suggest that there are both time-invariant correlates of preference, and period-specific correlates.

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