Natural Language From Artificial Life
- 1 April 2002
- journal article
- review article
- Published by MIT Press in Artificial Life
- Vol. 8 (2) , 185-215
- https://doi.org/10.1162/106454602320184248
Abstract
This article aims to show that linguistics, in particular the study of the lexico-syntactic aspects of language, provides fertile ground for artificial life modeling. A survey of the models that have been developed over the last decade and a half is presented to demonstrate that ALife techniques have a lot to offer an explanatory theory of language. It is argued that this is because much of the structure of language is determined by the interaction of three complex adaptive systems: learning, culture, and biological evolution. Computational simulation, informed by theoretical linguistics, is an appropriate response to the challenge of explaining real linguistic data in terms of the processes that underpin human language.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Compositional Syntax From Cultural TransmissionArtificial Life, 2002
- Evolution of communication and language using signals, symbols, and wordsIEEE Transactions on Evolutionary Computation, 2001
- Grammatical acquisition: Inductive bias and coevolution of language and the language acquisition deviceLanguage, 2000
- From robotic toil to symbolic theft: Grounding transfer from entry-level to higher-level categories1Connection Science, 2000
- Experiments in Learning by Imitation - Grounding and Use of Communication in Robotic AgentsAdaptive Behavior, 1999
- The Emergence of a 'Language' in an Evolving Population of Neural NetworksConnection Science, 1998
- An Investigation into the Evolution of CommunicationAdaptive Behavior, 1997
- The Selection of Syntactic KnowledgeLanguage Acquisition, 1992
- A mathematical theory of learning transformational grammarJournal of Mathematical Psychology, 1975
- Language identification in the limitInformation and Control, 1967