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Parisi, D. (1997) An Artificial Life Approach to Language. Brain and Language, 59(1):121--146.

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Cangelosi,Greco,Harnad, Symbol Grounding and the Symbolic Theft Hypothesis, 2002 :: 6
Cangelosi,Parisi, The emergence of a language in an evolving population of neural networks, 1998 :: 64
Cangelosi,Parisi, How nouns and verbs differentially affect the behavior of artificial organisms, 2001 :: 13
Cangelosi,Parisi, Computer Simulation: A New Scientific Approach to the Study of Language Evolution, 2002 :: 10
Cangelosi,Parisi, The processing of verbs and nouns in neural networks: Insights from Synthetic Brain Imaging, 2004 :: 6
Cangelosi, Evolution of communication and language using signals, symbols, and words, 2001 :: 27
Grim,Denis,Kokalis, Learning to communicate: The emergence of signaling in spatialized arrays of neural nets, 2002 :: 2
Ke, Self-organization and Language Evolution: System, Population and Individual, 2004 :: 4
Mirolli,Parisi, How can we explain the emergence of a language that benefits the hearer but not the speaker?, 2005 :: 5
Mirolli,Parisi, How Producer Biases Can Favor the Evolution of Communication: An Analysis of Evolutionary Dynamics, 2008 ::
Munroe,Cangelosi, Learning and the evolution of language: The role of cultural variation and learning costs in the Baldwin Effect, 2002 :: 12
Oliphant,Batali, Learning and the emergence of coordinated communication, 1997 :: 61
Parisi,Cangelosi,Falcetta, Verbs, Nouns and Simulated Language games, 2002 :: 3
Parisi,Cangelosi, A Unified Simulation Scenario for Language Development, Evolution, and Historical Change, 2002 :: 4
Wagner,Reggia,Uriagereka,Wilkinson, Progress in the simulation of emergent communication and language, 2003 :: 22
Wagner, Cooperative Strategies and the Evolution of Communication, 2000 :: 9

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