CFP: Adaptive Behavior: Special Issue on Language Acquisition and Evolution
Paul Vogt
paulv at ling.ed.ac.uk
Fri Aug 6 07:10:01 EDT 2004
Call for Papers: Language Acquisition and Evolution
Special Issue: Adaptive Behavior
Guest editor: Paul Vogt
Submission deadline: 15 November 2004
URL: http://www.ling.ed.ac.uk/~paulv/ab-cfp.html
It is widely believed that language has evolved through mutual
interactive behaviour of individuals within an ecological niche, through
individual adaptations and self-organisation. Humans communicate with
each other about events that happen in their environment. When novel
events occur, they might construct new internal representations of these
events - either by learning from other's behaviour or by inventing new
behaviour. They can then transmit this newly constructed knowledge to
other humans. By subsequent local interactions between individuals,
self-organisation can guide the emergence of a global structure called
language as has repeatedly been shown by several computer models.
Many computational studies on the evolution of language have primarily
focused on the idea that language is a complex dynamical adaptive
system, as outlined above. Central to these studies is the cultural
evolution of language, i.e. language is thought to have evolved based on
cultural transmissions rather than on biological adaptations. Cultural
transmission of language is impossible without the ability to learn
language. This special issue is inspired by a recent Symposium on
Language Evolution and Acquisition held at the 2004 Human Behavior &
Evolution Society conference, and focuses on the relation between
language origins, acquisition and evolution. Two main themes to be
explored are how could language acquisition mechanisms have evolved, and
the impact that particular acquisition skills may have had on the
evolution of language itself.
/Adaptive Behavior/ solicits papers that present synthetic studies that
explicitly focuses on the interface between language origins and/or
evolution, and language acquisition. The models should involve either
computer simulations or robotic platforms. However, those papers that
integrate models with psychological, linguistic or biological data are
particularly welcome. Papers in this special issue should not exceed the
equivalent length of 10 journal pages. See the web-site of the Adaptive
Behavior (http://www.isab.org.uk/journal/) for further instructions.
Topics include (though not restricted):
* Evolution of
o language acquisition skills.
o joint attention.
o corrective feedback.
* Phonetics.
* Lexicon formation.
* Meaning inference.
* Symbol grounding in language.
* Emergence of syntax or grammar.
* Language change.
* Language diversity.
If you intend to submit a paper, please send a tentative title and
abstract to the guest editor (Paul Vogt, paulv at ling.ed.ac.uk). (This
would help to speed up the selection of reviewers.) If you are uncertain
whether your paper would satisfy the topic of this special issue, or if
you wish further information, please contact the guest editor too.
Important dates:
* *15 November 2004: Submission deadline.*
* 15 February 2005: Notification of acceptance.
* 15 April 2005: Revised versions due.
* 30 May 2005: Authors notified (for revised papers).
* Late 2005: Special issue appears.
--
Dr. Paul Vogt, Research Fellow
Language Evolution and Computation Research Unit
School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences
University of Edinburgh
Phone: +44 (0)131 6503960
Fax: +44 (0)131 6503962
URL: http://www.ling.ed.ac.uk/~paulv
More information about the Connectionists
mailing list