Understanding computers and cognition
Understanding computers and cognition
What computers still can't do: a critique of artificial reason
What computers still can't do: a critique of artificial reason
The origins of syntax in visually grounded robotic agents
Artificial Intelligence - Special issue: artificial intelligence 40 years later
Cambrian intelligence: the early history of the new AI
Cambrian intelligence: the early history of the new AI
Understanding intelligence
Stochastic Complexity in Statistical Inquiry Theory
Stochastic Complexity in Statistical Inquiry Theory
Natural language from artificial life
Artificial Life
Syntax as an Emergent Characteristic of the Evolution of Semantic Complexity
Minds and Machines
Made to Measure: Ecological Rationality in Structured Environments
Minds and Machines
Constructing and Sharing Perceptual Distiinctions
ECML '97 Proceedings of the 9th European Conference on Machine Learning
Compositional Syntax From Cultural Transmission
Artificial Life
IEEE Transactions on Evolutionary Computation
Hi-index | 0.00 |
How and where are the universal features of language specified? We consider language users as situated agents acting as conduits for the cultural transmission of language. Using multi-agent computational models we show that certain hallmarks of language are adaptive in the context of cultural transmission. This observation requires us to reconsider the role of innateness in explaining the characteristic structure of language. The relationship between innate bias and the universal features of language becomes opaque when we consider that significant linguistic evolution can occur as a result of cultural transmission.