Why is scaling up models of language evolution hard?
Publication year
2021Publisher
Vienna : Cognitive Science Society
In
Fitch, T.; Lamm, C.; Leder, H. (ed.), Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society (CogSci 2021), pp. 209-215Related links
Annotation
43rd Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society (CogSci 2021) (Vienna, 26-29 July, 2021)
Publication type
Article in monograph or in proceedings
Display more detailsDisplay less details
Editor(s)
Fitch, T.
Lamm, C.
Leder, H.
Tessmar-Raible, C.
Organization
Internationale Bedrijfscommunicatie
SW OZ DCC AI
PI Group Intention & Action
SW OZ DCC CO
Languages used
English (eng)
Book title
Fitch, T.; Lamm, C.; Leder, H. (ed.), Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society (CogSci 2021)
Page start
p. 209
Page end
p. 215
Subject
111 000 Intention & Action; Action, intention, and motor control; Cognitive artificial intelligence; Cultural Cognition and Multimodal Interaction; Language & Communication; Language in InteractionAbstract
Computational model simulations have been very fruitful for gaining insight into how the systematic structure we observe in the world's natural languages could have emerged through cultural evolution. However, these model simulations operate on a toy scale compared to the size of actual human vocabularies, due to the prohibitive computational resource demands that simulations with larger lexicons would pose. Using computational complexity analysis, we show that this is not an implementational artifact, but instead it reflects a deeper theoretical issue: these models are (in their current formulation) computationally intractable. This has important theoretical implications, because it means that there is no way of knowing whether or not the properties and regularities observed for the toy models would scale up. All is not lost however, because awareness of intractability allows us to face the issue of scaling head-on, and can guide the development of our theories.
Subsidient
NWO (Grant code:info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/NWO/Gravitation/024.001.006)
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [243984]
- Donders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging [3983]
- Electronic publications [130873]
- Faculty of Arts [29763]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [30023]
- Open Access publications [105044]
Upload full text
Use your RU credentials (u/z-number and password) to log in with SURFconext to upload a file for processing by the repository team.