A simulation study exploring the role of cultural transmission in language evolution

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Abstract

This paper proposes a language acquisition framework that includes both intra-generational transmission among children and inter-generational transmission between adults and children. A multi-agent computational model that adopts this framework is designed to evaluate the relative roles of these forms of cultural transmission in language evolution. It is shown that intra-generational transmission helps accelerate the convergence of linguistic knowledge and introduce changes in the communal language, while inter-generational transmission helps preserve an initial language to a certain extent. Due to conventionalisation during transmission, both forms of transmission collectively achieve a dynamic equilibrium of language evolution: On short time-scales, good understandability is maintained among individuals across generations; in the long run, language change is inevitable. © 2010 Taylor & Francis.

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Gong, T., Minett, J. W., & Wang, W. S. Y. (2010). A simulation study exploring the role of cultural transmission in language evolution. Connection Science, 22(1), 69–85. https://doi.org/10.1080/09540090903198819

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