Kirby Simon, Tamariz Monica, Cornish Hannah, Smith Kenny
School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
Cognition. 2015 Aug;141:87-102. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2015.03.016. Epub 2015 May 14.
Language exhibits striking systematic structure. Words are composed of combinations of reusable sounds, and those words in turn are combined to form complex sentences. These properties make language unique among natural communication systems and enable our species to convey an open-ended set of messages. We provide a cultural evolutionary account of the origins of this structure. We show, using simulations of rational learners and laboratory experiments, that structure arises from a trade-off between pressures for compressibility (imposed during learning) and expressivity (imposed during communication). We further demonstrate that the relative strength of these two pressures can be varied in different social contexts, leading to novel predictions about the emergence of structured behaviour in the wild.
语言展现出惊人的系统结构。单词由可重复使用的语音组合而成,而这些单词又组合在一起形成复杂的句子。这些特性使语言在自然交流系统中独树一帜,并使我们人类能够传达一系列无限制的信息。我们提供了关于这种结构起源的文化进化解释。我们通过对理性学习者的模拟和实验室实验表明,结构源于学习过程中对可压缩性的压力(学习时施加)和表达性的压力(交流时施加)之间的权衡。我们进一步证明,这两种压力的相对强度在不同的社会背景中可以有所不同,从而对野外结构化行为的出现产生新的预测。