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ECAL
2007
Springer

Multi-level Selection in the Emergence of Language Systematicity

13 years 9 months ago
Multi-level Selection in the Emergence of Language Systematicity
Language can be viewed as a complex adaptive system which is continuously shaped and reshaped by the actions of its users as they try to solve communicative problems. To maintain coherence in the overall system, different language elements (sounds, words, grammatical constructions) compete with each other for global acceptance. This paper examines what happens when a language system uses systematic structure, in the sense that certain meaning-form conventions are themselves parts of larger units. We argue that in this case multi-level selection occurs: at the level of elements (e.g. tense affixes) and at the level of larger units in which these elements are used (e.g. phrases). Achieving and maintaining linguistic coherence in the population under these conditions is non-trivial. This paper shows that it is nevertheless possible when agents take multiple levels into account both for processing meaning-form associations and for consolidating the language inventory after each interactio...
Luc Steels, Remi van Trijp, Pieter Wellens
Added 07 Jun 2010
Updated 07 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2007
Where ECAL
Authors Luc Steels, Remi van Trijp, Pieter Wellens
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