Language Evolution and Computation Bibliography

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Sean Tauber
2012
Advances in Complex Systems 15(03n04):1150022, 2012
Linguistic meaning is a convention. This article investigates how such conventions can arise for color categories in populations of simulated 'agents'. The method uses concepts from evolutionary game theory: A language game where agents assign names to color patches and is played ...MORE ⇓
Linguistic meaning is a convention. This article investigates how such conventions can arise for color categories in populations of simulated 'agents'. The method uses concepts from evolutionary game theory: A language game where agents assign names to color patches and is played repeatedly by members of a population. The evolutionary dynamics employed make minimal assumptions about agents' perceptions and learning processes. Through various simulations it is shown that under different kinds of reasonable conditions involving outcomes of individual games, the evolutionary dynamics push populations to stationary equilibria, which can be interpreted as achieving shared population meaning systems. Optimal population agreement for meaning is characterized through a mathematical formula, and the simulations presented reveal that for a wide variety of situations, optimality is achieved.