The fifth seminar of the CS4: Complexity Systems Simulation Seminar Series 2012/13 will take place Wednesday 5th December. Dr Kenny Smith from the University of Edinburgh will give the CS4 talk “Language structure is a trade-off between compression and expression” at 4-5pm, B53/4025, Highfield Campus.
All talks within the CS4 seminar series are free and take place fortnightly on Wednesdays, 4-5pm, B53/4025, Highlfield Campus. All are warmly welcome to attend. For videos of previous talks and details of future talks please visit: http://cs4southampton.wordpress.com
No registration is required. Please contact Alison Simmance ([email protected]) for all queries.
Complex Systems Simulation Seminar Series no 5
ABSTRACT:
Language structure is a trade-off between compression and expression
Dr Kenny Smith from the University of Edinburgh
5th December
4-5pm, B53/4025, Highfield Campus
“Language is unique among the communication systems of the natural world in that it is structured: we convey complex meanings by constructing complex utterances in a rule-governed manner. While structure in language is sometimes explained as a consequence of biological evolution of the human capacity for language, I will present a mix of experimental and simulation data which shows that linguistic structure arises as a result of cultural evolution. Languages change as a consequence of being learned and used in populations, in response to pressures for compressibility (arising from language learning) and expressivity (arising from language use). Pressure for compressibility but not expressivity leads to degenerate languages which are easy to learn but not useful for communication. Pressure for expressivity but not compressibility leads to languages which are communicatively functional but unstructured and unlike human language. Only when both pressures are at play do we see structure emerge: structured languages are compressible and yet still communicatively functional. Importantly, the extent to which languages need to be compressible and expressive depends on the structure of the populations they are transmitted and used in: we should expect to see differences in language structure which are modulated by differences in the social structure of human populations, which would be unexpected if language structure were a reflection of universal features of human biology”.