Language Evolution and Computation Bibliography

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Journal :: Language Sciences
2013
Multidisciplinary approaches in evolutionary linguisticsPDF
Language Sciences 37:1--13, 2013
Studying language evolution has become resurgent in modern scientific research. In this revival field, approaches from a number of disciplines other than linguistics, including (paleo)anthropology and archaeology, animal behaviors, genetics, neuroscience, computer simulation, and ...MORE ⇓
Studying language evolution has become resurgent in modern scientific research. In this revival field, approaches from a number of disciplines other than linguistics, including (paleo)anthropology and archaeology, animal behaviors, genetics, neuroscience, computer simulation, and psychological experimentation, have been adopted, and a wide scope of topics have been examined in one way or another, covering not only world languages, but also human behaviors, brains and cultural products, as well as nonhuman primates and other species remote to humans. In this paper, together with a survey of recent findings based on these many approaches, we evaluate how this multidisciplinary perspective yields important insights into a comprehensive understanding of language, its evolution, and human cognition.
2012
The conjectured role of Polani et al.s relevant information, behavioral variation and recursive cognition in selection for a human language faculty
Language Sciences, pages 12--24, 2012
The speculative argument presented in this review is based on the assumption that Polani et al.'s formalization will limit communication to the minimal amount of information needed to employ adaptive behavior. Selection for some of the distinct features of human language ...
2010
Rich memory and distributed phonologyPDF
Language Sciences 32(1):43--55, 2010
It is claimed here that experimental evidence about human speech processing and the richness of memory for linguistic material supports a distributed view of language where every speaker creates an idiosyncratic perspective on the linguistic conventions of the ...
2009
Evolutionary developmental linguistics: Naturalization of the faculty of language
Language Sciences 31(1):33--59, 2009
Since language is a biological trait, it is necessary to investigate its evolution, development, and functions, along with the mechanisms that have been set aside, and are now recruited, for its acquisition and use. It is argued here that progress toward each of these goals can ...MORE ⇓
Since language is a biological trait, it is necessary to investigate its evolution, development, and functions, along with the mechanisms that have been set aside, and are now recruited, for its acquisition and use. It is argued here that progress toward each of these goals can ...
2007
Language Sciences, 2007
In this paper we present the `grounded adaptive agent' computational framework for studying the emergence of communication and language. This modeling framework is based on simulations of population of cognitive agents that evolve linguistic capabilities by interacting with their ...MORE ⇓
In this paper we present the `grounded adaptive agent' computational framework for studying the emergence of communication and language. This modeling framework is based on simulations of population of cognitive agents that evolve linguistic capabilities by interacting with their social and physical environment (internal and external symbol grounding). These models provide an integrative vision of language where the linguistic abilities of cognitive agents strictly depend on other social, sensorimotor, neural and cognitive capabilities. Here language is not seen as an isolated and dedicated symbol processing system, but rather as a heterogeneous set of artifacts implicated in cultural and cognitive activities. The proposed modeling approach is also closely related to embodied cognition theories of the grounding of language in the organism's perceptual and motor systems.
Essential properties of language, or, why language is not a code
Language Sciences 29(5):650--671, 2007
Despite a strong tradition of viewing coded equivalence as the underlying principle of linguistic semiotics, it lacks the power needed to understand and explain language as an empirical phenomenon characterized by complex dynamics. Applying the biology of ...