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Brighton, H., Kirby, S., and Smith, K. (2005) Cultural Selection for Learnability: Three principles underlying the view that language adapts to be learnable. In Tallerman, M., editor, Language Origins: Perspectives on Evolution. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

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Brighton,Kirby, Understanding Linguistic Evolution by Visualizing the Emergence of Topographic Mappings, 2006 :: 2
Brighton,Smith,Kirby, Language as an evolutionary system, 2005 :: 10
Brighton, Linguistic Evolution and Induction by Minimum Description Length, 2005 :: 1
Choudhury, Computational Models of Real World Phonological Change, 2007 ::
Hoefler, Why has ambiguous syntax emerged?, 2006 ::
Oudeyer,Kaplan, Language Evolution as a Darwinian Process: Computational Studies, 2007 :: 1
Oudeyer, How Phonological Structures Can Be Culturally Selected for Learnability, 2005 :: 5
Parker, Evolution as a Constraint on Theories of Syntax: The Case against Minimalism, 2006 :: 1
Ritchie,Kirby,Hawkey, Song learning as an indicator mechanism: modelling the developmental stress hypothesis, 2008 ::
Smith,Kirby, Cultural evolution: implications for understanding the human language faculty and its evolution, 2008 :: 4
Smith, Cultural evolution of language, 2006 ::
van Trijp, Analogy and Multi-Level Selection in the Formation of a Case Grammar. A Case Study in Fluid Construction Grammar, 2008 ::
Wedel, Feedback and regularity in the lexicon, 2007 :: 1

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