Learning and the Emergence of Coordinated Communication (1997)
| Citations: | 28 - 1 self |
BibTeX
@MISC{Oliphant97learningand,
author = {Michael Oliphant and John Batali},
title = {Learning and the Emergence of Coordinated Communication},
year = {1997}
}
OpenURL
Abstract
this paper is on procedures whereby new (e.g., juvenile) members of a population could learn to communicate with the other members by observing their communicative behavior. Two apparently distinct issues are relevant to the evaluation of such learning procedures. First, the procedure must enable the new members to accurately acquire the communication system of the population, even though their observations may be limited, noisy, or otherwise misleading. Second, the learning procedure used by its new members will affect the population's communication system over time. The use of a particular procedure might result in the population's communication increasing in coordination, ultimately yielding a nearly optimally coordinated system. If a learning procedure were to satisfy both criteria, it could explain how learned communication systems are maintained over time, as well as how they are established in the first place.







