The Emergence of Quantifiers
| Authors |
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| Publication date | 2012 |
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| Book title | Experiments in cultural language evolution |
| ISBN |
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| Series | Advances in interaction studies, 3 |
| Pages (from-to) | 277-304 |
| Publisher | Amsterdam: John Benjamins |
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| Abstract |
Human natural languages use quantifiers as ways to designate the number of objects of a set. They include numerals, such as "three", or circumscriptions, such as "a few". The latter are not only underdetermined but also context dependent. We provide a cultural-evolution explanation for the emergence of such quantifiers, focusing in particular on the role of environmental constraints on strategy choices. Through a series of situated interaction experiments, we show how a community of robotic agents can self-organize a quantification system. Different perceptions of the scene make underdetermined quantifiers useful and environments in which the distribution of objects exhibits some degree of predictability creates favorable conditions for context-dependent quantifiers.
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| Document type | Chapter |
| Language | English |
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