An adaptive communication protocol for cooperating mobile robots
Proceedings of the second international conference on From animals to animats 2 : simulation of adaptive behavior: simulation of adaptive behavior
Stochasticity as a source of innovation in language games
ALIFE Proceedings of the sixth international conference on Artificial life
Constructing and Sharing Perceptual Distiinctions
ECML '97 Proceedings of the 9th European Conference on Machine Learning
The Construction and Acquisition of Visual Categories
EWLR-6 Proceedings of the 6th European Workshop on Learning Robots
Cognitive Teleportation and Situated Embodiment
ECAL '99 Proceedings of the 5th European Conference on Advances in Artificial Life
Language as a Complex Adaptive System
PPSN VI Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Parallel Problem Solving from Nature
The Role of Anticipation in the Emergence of Language
Anticipatory Behavior in Adaptive Learning Systems
E-Business Vocabularies as a Moving Target: Quantifying the Conceptual Dynamics in Domains
EKAW '08 Proceedings of the 16th international conference on Knowledge Engineering: Practice and Patterns
Augmenting navigation for collaborative tagging with emergent semantics
ISWC'06 Proceedings of the 5th international conference on The Semantic Web
Learning to interpret pointing gestures: experiments with four-legged autonomous robots
Biomimetic Neural Learning for Intelligent Robots
Interoperability through emergent semantics a semiotic dynamics approach
Journal on Data Semantics VI
Hi-index | 0.00 |
We report on a case study in the emergence of a lexicon in a group of autonomous distributed agents situated and grounded in an open environment. Because the agents are autonomous, grounded, and situated, the possible words and possible meanings are not fixed but continuously change as the agents autonomously evolve their communication system and adapt it to novel situations. The case study shows that a complex semiotic dynamics unfolds and that generalisations present in the language are due to processes outside the agent.