Department of Mathematics, University of California Irvine, 540J Rowland Hall, Irvine, CA 92697, USA.
J Theor Biol. 2010 May 7;264(1):104-18. doi: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2010.01.010. Epub 2010 Jan 20.
Communication in nature is not restricted to the transmitter-receiver pair. Unintended listeners, or eavesdroppers, can intercept the signal and possibly utilize the received information to their benefit, which may confer a certain cost to the communicating pair. In this paper we explore (computationally and mathematically) such situations with the goal of uncovering their effect on language evolution. We find that in the presence of eavesdropping, languages exhibit a tendency to become more complex. On the other hand, if eavesdroppers belong to a different (competing) population, the languages used by the two populations tend to converge, if the cost of eavesdropping is sufficiently high; otherwise the languages synchronize. These findings are discussed in the context of animal communication and human language. In particular, the emergence of synonyms is predicted. We demonstrate that a small associated cost can suppress synonyms in the absence of eavesdropping, but that their likelihood increases strongly with the probability of eavesdropping.
自然界中的通信并不仅限于发送者-接收者对。无意的听众,或者说窃听者,可以截获信号,并可能利用接收到的信息为自己谋取利益,这可能会给通信双方带来一定的代价。在本文中,我们通过计算和数学方法探索了这种情况,旨在揭示其对语言进化的影响。我们发现,在存在窃听的情况下,语言会倾向于变得更加复杂。另一方面,如果窃听者属于不同的(竞争的)群体,如果窃听的代价足够高,两个群体使用的语言就会趋同;否则,语言就会同步。这些发现将在动物通信和人类语言的背景下进行讨论。特别是,我们预测了同义词的出现。我们证明,在没有窃听的情况下,一个小的相关代价可以抑制同义词的出现,但随着窃听概率的增加,同义词出现的可能性会大大增加。