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19 - Social Transmission Favours Linguistic Generalisation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 November 2009

Chris Knight
Affiliation:
University of East London
Michael Studdert-Kennedy
Affiliation:
Haskins Laboratories
James Hurford
Affiliation:
University of Edinburgh
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Summary

Introduction

This study focuses on the emergence and preservation of linguistic generalisations in a community. Generalisations originate in the innate capacities of individuals for language acquisition and invention. The cycle of language transmission through individual competences (I-languages) and public performance (E-language) selects differentially among innately available types of generalisation. Thus, certain types of general pattern tend to survive in the community's language system as a consequence of social transmission.

Computational simulations are described in which a population that initially shares no common signalling system converges over time on a coordinated system. For the emergence of shared vocabularies, the dynamics of such systems are now well understood (see for example Oliphant 1997 and Steels 1996a, 1996b, 1997, in press).

This chapter demonstrates how systems with syntax can emerge from the same fundamental population dynamics. The essential ingredients of the computational model are:

  1. Individuals are capable of cognitively representing complex meanings.

  2. Individuals who have no rules for signalling meanings have a repertoire of sounds which they may randomly emit when attempting to ‘express a meaning’.

  3. Individuals are capable of inferring, or postulating, general correlations in observed pairings of complex meanings and strings of sounds.

  4. Once inferred by an individual, a connection between a complex meaning and a sound sequence becomes the default basis for the expression of complex meanings by that individual.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Evolutionary Emergence of Language
Social Function and the Origins of Linguistic Form
, pp. 324 - 352
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2000

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