The evolutionary language game: an orthogonal approach.

J Theor Biol

Institut de Recherches Interdisciplinaires et de Développements en Intelligence Artificielle, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Avenue Franklin Roosevelt 50,1050 Brussels, Belgium.

Published: August 2005

AI Article Synopsis

  • Evolutionary game dynamics offer a mathematical approach to understanding cultural language evolution, focusing on how vocabulary develops in populations.
  • The proposed model emphasizes active cultural acquisition through peer interactions instead of the traditional vertical learning from parents.
  • The article introduces the concept of the "naming game" as a key mechanism for cultural transmission and connects it to evolutionary dynamics, with insights supported by simple experiments.

Article Abstract

Evolutionary game dynamics have been proposed as a mathematical framework for the cultural evolution of language and more specifically the evolution of vocabulary. This article discusses a model that is mutually exclusive in its underlying principals with some previously suggested models. The model describes how individuals in a population culturally acquire a vocabulary by actively participating in the acquisition process instead of passively observing and communicate through peer-to-peer interactions instead of vertical parent-offspring relations. Concretely, a notion of social/cultural learning called the naming game is first abstracted using learning theory. This abstraction defines the required cultural transmission mechanism for an evolutionary process. Second, the derived transmission system is expressed in terms of the well-known selection-mutation model defined in the context of evolutionary dynamics. In this way, the analogy between social learning and evolution at the level of meaning-word associations is made explicit. Although only horizontal and oblique transmission structures will be considered, extensions to vertical structures over different genetic generations can easily be incorporated. We provide a number of simplified experiments to clarify our reasoning.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jtbi.2005.02.009DOI Listing

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