Abstract

Iterated learning takes place when the input into a particular individual’s learning process is itself the output of another individual’s learning process. This is an important feature to capture when investigating human language change, or the dynamics of culturally learned behaviours in general. Over the last fifteen years, the Iterated Learning Model (ILM) has been used to shed light on how the population-level characteristics of learned communication arise. However, until now each iteration of the model has tended to feature a single immature language user learning from their interactions with a single mature language user. Here, the ILM is extended to include a population of immature and mature language users. We demonstrate that the structure and make-up of this population influences the dynamics of language change that occur over generational time. In particular, we show that, by increasing the number of trainers from which an agent learns, the agent in question learns a fully compositional language at a much faster rate, and with less training data. It is also shown that, so long as the number of mature agents is large enough, this finding holds even if a learner’s trainers include other agents that do not yet posses full linguistic competence.

Highlights

  • Human language is a learned system of symbolic representation that exhibits syntactic structure

  • This paper explores the changes to the behaviour exhibited by the Iterated Learning Model (ILM) that result from situating language learning within a population of mature and immature learners

  • We have demonstrated that Kirby and Hurford’s (2002) iterated learning model variant can operate successfully within a population of agents

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Summary

Introduction

Human language is a learned system of symbolic representation that exhibits syntactic structure. This paper explores the changes to the behaviour exhibited by the ILM that result from situating language learning within a population of mature and immature learners.

Results
Conclusion
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