Aga Tentakulus > 25-09-2020, 05:54 AM
Stephen Carlson > 25-09-2020, 06:00 AM
(24-09-2020, 04:02 AM)-JKP- Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.
Stephen Carlson > 25-09-2020, 06:03 AM
(24-09-2020, 10:57 AM)ReneZ Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.For each bullet one can find plenty of cases where a meaningful text fully fits the description.True, but is there is a meaningful text that fully fits all of the bullets? It won't do to that the number of hapax legomena fit a language like Georgian while the word structure fits a language like Chinese. Georgian and Chinese are completely different languages and use incompatible strategies.
ReneZ > 25-09-2020, 06:41 AM
Koen G > 25-09-2020, 07:13 AM
Mark Knowles > 25-09-2020, 08:15 AM
(25-09-2020, 12:44 AM)-JKP- Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I've posted examples on my blog of cryptic-looking but very logical two- and three-character indexing systems.
Koen G > 25-09-2020, 08:21 AM
Mark Knowles > 25-09-2020, 08:29 AM
(25-09-2020, 08:21 AM)Koen G Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.We don't even know how the VM encodes text. Maybe dissimilar words may end up looking similar or even the same. While this is not ideal and might cause ambiguity, it does not indicate complete lack of meaning.
MarcoP > 25-09-2020, 09:07 AM
Timm&Schinnner' Wrote:An enigmatic property of the VMS reported in [12] is the presence of long-range correlations visible on the bit level of the text. They let the glyph sequences appear as a stochastic process with underlying Pólya-like distribution, rather than natural language.
Schinner Wrote:Previous investigations by Kokol et al. [8] of various human writings have demonstrated that for natural language texts (almost independent of the language used) the asymptotic exponent alpha of F(l) does not notably differ from 0.5... Most interestingly, the VMS text shows completely different behavior: a crossover point exists where the ‘‘random process’’ alpha~0.5 turns into an asymptotic exponent alpha~0.85, indicating the presence of ‘‘memory effects’’ in the underlying stochastic process. ... the crossover point L~360 (=72 characters x5 bits) of the whole text fits well to the average line length
Kokol et al Wrote:We see that the mean α for natural language texts is very near 0.5, but single texts differ from this critical value significantly.
Kokol et al Wrote:The difference in α between different writings can be attributed to various factors like personal preferences, used standards, language, type of the text or the problem being solved, type of the organisation in which the writer (or programmer) works, different syntactic, semantic, pragmatic rules etc.
Aga Tentakulus > 25-09-2020, 09:51 AM