Munroe Steve, Cangelosi Angelo
Intelligent Agent Group Department of Electronics and Computer Science, University of Southampton, Southampton, SO17 1BJ, UK.
Artif Life. 2002;8(4):311-39. doi: 10.1162/106454602321202408.
The Baldwin effect has been explicitly used by Pinker and Bloom as an explanation of the origins of language and the evolution of a language acquisition device. This article presents new simulations of an artificial life model for the evolution of compositional languages. It specifically addresses the role of cultural variation and of learning costs in the Baldwin effect for the evolution of language. Results show that when a high cost is associated with language learning, agents gradually assimilate in their genome some explicit features (e.g., lexical properties) of the specific language they are exposed to. When the structure of the language is allowed to vary through cultural transmission, Baldwinian processes cause, instead, the assimilation of a predisposition to learn, rather than any structural properties associated with a specific language. The analysis of the mechanisms underlying such a predisposition in terms of categorical perception supports Deacon's hypothesis regarding the Baldwinian inheritance of general underlying cognitive capabilities that serve language acquisition. This is in opposition to the thesis that argues for assimilation of structural properties needed for the specification of a full-blown language acquisition device.
平克(Pinker)和布鲁姆(Bloom)明确使用鲍德温效应来解释语言的起源以及语言习得机制的进化。本文展示了一种用于组合语言进化的人工生命模型的新模拟。它特别探讨了文化变异和学习成本在语言进化的鲍德温效应中的作用。结果表明,当语言学习成本较高时,主体会在其基因组中逐渐吸收他们所接触的特定语言的一些明确特征(例如词汇属性)。相反,当语言结构通过文化传播而变化时,鲍德温过程会导致主体吸收一种学习倾向,而非与特定语言相关的任何结构属性。从范畴感知角度对这种倾向背后机制的分析支持了迪肯(Deacon)关于为语言习得服务的一般潜在认知能力的鲍德温式遗传的假设。这与主张吸收用于完整语言习得机制规范所需结构属性的观点相反。