Abstract

This paper explores how information flow properties of a network affect the formation of categories shared between individuals, who are communicating through that network. Our work is based on the established multi-agent model of the emergence of linguistic categories grounded in external environment. We study how network information propagation efficiency and the direction of information flow affect categorization by performing simulations with idealized network topologies optimizing certain network centrality measures. We measure dynamic social adaptation when either network topology or environment is subject to change during the experiment, and the system has to adapt to new conditions. We find that both decentralized network topology efficient in information propagation and the presence of central authority (information flow from the center to peripheries) are beneficial for the formation of global agreement between agents. Systems with central authority cope well with network topology change, but are less robust in the case of environment change. These findings help to understand which network properties affect processes of social adaptation. They are important to inform the debate on the advantages and disadvantages of centralized systems.

Highlights

  • To study phenomena such as convention sharing, cultural transmission and language evolution researchers are employing multi-agent modeling [1,2,3,4,5]

  • The first experiment concerned the ability of different topologies to reach global agreement

  • We have shown that the language games model can be used with a range of network topologies, and is flexible enough to deal with environment or topology changes during the simulation

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Summary

Introduction

To study phenomena such as convention sharing, cultural transmission and language evolution researchers are employing multi-agent modeling [1,2,3,4,5]. Such methods allow simulating processes which naturally unfold on very slow time-scales. With computational models it is possible to formulate hypotheses as to how the observed properties of language—such as categories and vocabulary structure—have evolved over time Realistic models of this kind have to include social factors and limitations, which influence the language structure [6, 7].

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