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A method of identifying allographs in undeciphered scripts and its application to the Indus Valley Script

Linguistics and Languages

A method of identifying allographs in undeciphered scripts and its application to the Indus Valley Script

S. Daggumati and P. Z. Revesz

Discover a groundbreaking approach by Shruti Daggumati and Peter Z. Revesz for identifying redundant signs in undeciphered scripts! This innovative method, applied to the Indus Valley Script, reveals its multi-directionality and proposes a reduced sign list that could transform future decipherment efforts.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
This work describes a general method of testing for redundancies in the sign lists of ancient scripts by data mining the positions of the signs within the inscriptions. The redundant signs are allographs of the same grapheme. The method is applied to the undeciphered Indus Valley Script, which stands out from other ancient scripts by having a large proposed sign list that contains dozens of asymmetric signs that have mirrored pairs. By a statistical analysis of mirrored asymmetric signs, this paper shows that the Indus Valley Script was multi-directional and the mirroring of signs often denotes only the direction of writing without any difference in meaning. For this and five other specific reasons listed in the paper, 50 pairs of signs, 23 mirrored, and 27 non-mirrored, can be grouped together because each pair consists of only insignificant variations of the same original sign. The reduced sign list may make decipherment easier in the future.
Publisher
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Feb 17, 2021
Authors
Shruti Daggumati, Peter Z. Revesz
Tags
Indus Valley Script
redundant signs
allographs
multi-directionality
decipherment
inscriptions
sign positions
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