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Modelling Social Structures and Hierarchies in Language Evolution (1203.0504v1)
Published 2 Mar 2012 in cs.CL, cs.AI, and cs.MA
Abstract: Language evolution might have preferred certain prior social configurations over others. Experiments conducted with models of different social structures (varying subgroup interactions and the role of a dominant interlocutor) suggest that having isolated agent groups rather than an interconnected agent is more advantageous for the emergence of a social communication system. Distinctive groups that are closely connected by communication yield systems less like natural language than fully isolated groups inhabiting the same world. Furthermore, the addition of a dominant male who is asymmetrically favoured as a hearer, and equally likely to be a speaker has no positive influence on the disjoint groups.
- Martin Bachwerk (2 papers)
- Carl Vogel (6 papers)