On The Evolutionary Origin of Symbolic Communication
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- @Article{grouchy2016evolutionary,
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author = "Paul Grouchy and Gabriele M. T. D'Eleuterio and
Morten H Christiansen and Hod Lipson",
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title = "On The Evolutionary Origin of Symbolic Communication",
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journal = "Scientific reports",
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year = "2016",
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volume = "6",
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number = "34615",
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keywords = "genetic algorithms, genetic programming",
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publisher = "Nature Publishing Group",
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DOI = "doi:10.1038/srep34615",
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abstract = "The emergence of symbolic communication is often cited
as a critical step in the evolution of Homo sapiens,
language, and human-level cognition. It is a widely
held assumption that humans are the only species that
possess natural symbolic communication schemes,
although a variety of other species can be taught to
use symbols. The origin of symbolic communication
remains a controversial open problem, obfuscated by the
lack of a fossil record. Here we demonstrate an
unbroken evolutionary pathway from a population of
initially noncommunicating robots to the spontaneous
emergence of symbolic communication. Robots evolve in a
simulated world and are supplied with only a single
channel of communication. When their ability to
reproduce is motivated by the need to find a mate,
robots evolve indexical communication schemes from
initially noncommunicating populations in 99percent of
all experiments. Furthermore, 9percent of the
populations evolve a symbolic communication scheme
allowing pairs of robots to exchange information about
two independent spatial dimensions over a
one-dimensional channel, thereby increasing their
chance of reproduction. These results suggest that the
ability for symbolic communication could have emerged
spontaneously under natural selection, without
requiring cognitive preadaptations or preexisting
iconic communication schemes as previously
conjectured.",
- }
Genetic Programming entries for
Paul Grouchy
Gabriele M T D'Eleuterio
Morten H Christiansen
Hod Lipson
Citations