Language Evolution and Computation Bibliography

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Proceedings :: Proceedings of Language Evolution and Computation Workshop/Course at ESSLLI
2003
Modelling of Sound SystemsPDF
Proceedings of Language Evolution and Computation Workshop/Course at ESSLLI, pages 2-11, 2003
Phonemic Coding: Optimal Communication under Noise?PDF
Proceedings of Language Evolution and Computation Workshop/Course at ESSLLI, pages 12-21, 2003
Learning biases and language evolutionPDF
Proceedings of Language Evolution and Computation Workshop/Course at ESSLLI, pages 22-31, 2003
Abstract Structural hallmarks of language can be explained in terms of adaptation, by language, to pressures arising during its cultural transmission. Here I present a model which explains the compositional structure of language as an adaptation in response to ...
Modeling Language Acquisition, Change and VariationPDF
Proceedings of Language Evolution and Computation Workshop/Course at ESSLLI, pages 32-41, 2003
Fusional languages: No clear-cut boundary between morphemes; Expression of different categories within the same word is fused together to give a single, unsegmentable morph. Eg Russian (stol:“table”, lipa:“lime-tree”): singular I plural I singular II plural II nominative ...
Modelling the Emergence of CasePDF
Proceedings of Language Evolution and Computation Workshop/Course at ESSLLI, pages 42-51, 2003
Simulating language change with Functional OTPDF
Proceedings of Language Evolution and Computation Workshop/Course at ESSLLI, pages 52-61, 2003
The research reported here is a reaction to recent work by Judith Aissen on the typology of case marking systems within Optimality Theory (OT). Aissen (2000) explains certain linguistic universals by assuming universal sub-hierarchies of OT constraints. I found this ...
Modelling Zipfian Distributions in LanguagePDF
Proceedings of Language Evolution and Computation Workshop/Course at ESSLLI, pages 62-75, 2003
GK Zipf famously discussed a number of patterns in the distributions of linguistic units, such as words and phonemes, in texts. We address several of these here, and attempt to explain their origins in terms of simple principles of language use, including, but going beyond, ...
Iterated Learning and Grounding: From Holistic to Compositional LanguagesPDF
Proceedings of Language Evolution and Computation Workshop/Course at ESSLLI, pages 76-86, 2003
This paper presents a new computational model for studying the origins and evolution of compositional languages grounded through the interaction between agents and their environment. The model is based on previous work on adaptive grounding of lexicons and the iterated learning ...MORE ⇓
This paper presents a new computational model for studying the origins and evolution of compositional languages grounded through the interaction between agents and their environment. The model is based on previous work on adaptive grounding of lexicons and the iterated learning model. Although the model is still in a developmental phase, the first results show that a compositional language can emerge in which the structure reflects regularities present in the population's environment.
Grounding As LearningPDF
Proceedings of Language Evolution and Computation Workshop/Course at ESSLLI, pages 87-94, 2003
Communication among agents requires (among many other things) that each agent be able to identify the semantic values of the generators of the language. This is the” grounding” problem: how do agents with different cognitive and perceptual experiences successfully ...
Creole Viewed from Population DynamicsPDF
Proceedings of Language Evolution and Computation Workshop/Course at ESSLLI, pages 95-104, 2003
Creole is one of the main topics in various fields concerning the language origin and the language change, such as sociolinguistics, the developmental psychology of language, paleoanthropology and so on. Our purpose in this paper is to develop an evolutionary theory of language ...MORE ⇓
Creole is one of the main topics in various fields concerning the language origin and the language change, such as sociolinguistics, the developmental psychology of language, paleoanthropology and so on. Our purpose in this paper is to develop an evolutionary theory of language to study the emergence of creole. We discuss how the emergence of creole is dealt with in the perspective of population dynamics. The proposal of evolutionary equations is a modification of the language dynamics equations by Komarova et al. We show experimental results, in which we could observe the emergence of creole. Furthermore, we analyze the condition of creolization in terms of similarity among languages. We conclude that a creole becomes dominant when pre-existing languages are not similar to each other and rather similar to the newly appeared language (would-be-creole); however the new language must not be too similar, in which case pre-existing languages remain and coexist.
Modeling Phonological ChangePDF
Proceedings of Language Evolution and Computation Workshop/Course at ESSLLI, pages 105-114, 2003