1. Ackley, D., & Littman, M. (1994). Altruism in the evolution of communication. In R. Brooks & P. Maes (Eds.), Artificial Life IV: Proceedings of the fourth international workshop on the synthesis and simulation of living systems (pp. 40-48). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. | UIUC | |
2. Agre, P., & Chapman, D. (1987). Pengi: An implementation of a theory of activity. In Proceedings of the sixth national conference on artificial intelligence (AAAI-87) (pp. 262-272). Menlo Park, CA: AAAI Press. | ||
3. Alcock, J. (1975). Animal Behavior: An evolutionary approach. Sunderland, MA: Sinauer. | ||
4. Alcock, J. (1993). Animal Behavior: An evolutionary approach. Sunderland, MA: Sinauer. | ||
5. Anderson, C., & Ratnieks, F. L. W. (1999). Worker allocation in insect societies: Coordination of nectar foragers and nectar receivers in honey bee (Apis mellifera) colonies. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 46, 73-81. | ||
6. Attenborough, D. (1991). The trials of life: Hunting and escaping. New York: Ambrose Video Publishing, Inc. (Videocassette). | ||
7. Batali, J. (1995). Small signaling systems can evolve in the absence of benefit to the information sender. http://cogsci.ucsd.edu/batali/cv.html. | UIUC | |
8. Belew, R., & Menczer, F. (1996). Latent energy environments. In Belew and Mitchell [9], pp. 191-208. | ||
9. Belew, R., & Mitchell, M. (Eds.). (1996). Adaptive individuals in evolving populations. SFI studies in the sciences of complexity, Vol. XXVI. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley. | ||
10. Braitenberg, V. (1984). Vehicles: Experiments in synthetic psychology. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. | ||
11. Cangelosi, A., & Parisi, D. (1984). The emergence of a "language" in an evolving population of neural networks. Connection Science, 10, 83-97. | UIUC | |
12. Caraco, T., & Brown, J. L. (1986). A game between communcal breeders: When is food-sharing stable? Journal of Theoretical Biology, 118, 379-393. | ||
13. Charnov, E. L. (1976). Optimal foraging, the marginal value theorem. Theoretical Population Biology, 9, 129-136. | ||
14. Cook, W. E. (1997). Avian desert predators. Berlin: Springer. | ||
15. Cosmides, L., & Tooby, J. (1994). Origins of domain specificity: The evolution of functional organization. In L. Hirschfeld and S. Gelman (Eds.), Mapping the mind: Domain specificity in cognition and culture (pp. 85-116). New York: Cambridge University Press. | ||
16. Dawkins, R. (1990). The selfish gene. Oxford University Press. | ||
17. Dyer, M. G. (1995). Toward synthesizing artificial networks that exhibit cooperative intelligent behavior: Some open issues in artificial life. In C. G. Langton (Ed.), Artificial life: An overview (pp. 111-134). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. | UIUC | |
18. Elgar, M. A. (1986). House sparrows establish foraging flocks by giving chirrup calls if the resources are divisible. Animal Behavior, 34, 169-174. | ||
19. Ficken, M. S. (1981). Food finding in black-capped chickadees: Altruistic communication? Wilson Bulletin, 93(3), 393-394. | ||
20. Gadagkar, R. (1997). Survival strategies: Cooperation and conflict in animal societies. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. | ||
21. Gould, J. L. (1990). Honey bee cognition. Cognition, 37, 83-103. | ||
22. Hauser, M. D. (1996). The evolution of communication. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press/Bradford Books. | UIUC | |
23. Hendriks-Jansen, H. (1996). Catching ourselves in the act. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. | ||
24. Holland, J. (1995). Hidden order: How adaptation builds complexity. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley. | ||
25. Holland, O., & Melhuish, C. (1999). Stigmergy, self-organization, and sorting in collective robotics. Artificial Life, 5, 173-202. | ||
26. H¨olldobler, B. (1997). Chemical communication in social insects. In K. Immelman (Ed.), Grizmek's Encyclopedia of Ethology (pp. 519-526). New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold. | ||
27. H¨olldobler, B., & Wilson, E. O. (1994). Journey to the ants. London: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. | ||
28. Hutchins, E., & Hazlehurst, B. (1995). How to invent a lexicon: The development of shared symbols in interaction. In N. Gilbert & R. Conte (Eds.), Artificial societies: The computer simulation of social life (pp. 157-189). London: UCL Press. | UIUC | |
29. Johnson, T. D. (1996). Selective costs and benefits in the evolution of learning. In Belew and Mitchell [9], pp. 315-358. | ||
30. Klump, G. M., & Shalter, M. D. (1984). Acoustic behavior of birds and mammals in the predator context. Zeitschrift f¨ur Tierpsychologie, 66, 189-226. | ||
31. Krebs, J. R., & Dawkins, R. (1984). Animal signals: mind-reading and manipulation. In J. R. Krebs & N. B. Davies (Eds.), Behavioral ecology: An evolutionary approach (pp. 380-402). Sunderland, MA: Sinauer. | ||
32. Kroodsma, D. E., S´anchez, J., Stemple, D. W., Goodwin, E., da Silva, M. L., & Vielliard, J. M. E. (1999). Sedentary life style of neotropical sedge wrens promotes song imitation. Animal Behaviour, 57, 855-863. | ||
33. Laird, J., Newell, A., & Rosenbloom, P. (1987). Soar: An architecture for general intelligence. Artificial Intelligence, 33(1), 1-64. | ||
34. Lazarus, J., & Symonds, M. (1992). Contrasting effects of protective and obstructive cover on avian vigilance. Animal Behavior, 43, 519-521. | ||
35. Levin, M. (1995). The evolution of understanding: A genetic algorithm model of the evolution of communication. BioSystems, 36, 167-178. | UIUC | |
36. Macedonia, J. M., & Evans, C. E. (1993). Variation among mammalian alarm call systems. Ethology, 93, 177-197. | ||
37. MacLennan, B. J., & Burghardt, G. M. (1993). Synthetic ethology and the evolution of cooperative communication. Adaptive Behavior, 2(2), 161-188. | UIUC | |
38. Mateo, J. M. (1996). The development of alarm-call response behaviour in free-living juvenile Belding's ground squirrels. Animal Behaviour, 52, 489-505. | ||
39. Mayr, E. (1997). This is biology: The science of the living world. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press. | ||
40. Mesterton-Gibbons, M., & Dugatkin, L. A. (1999). On the evolution of delayed recruitment to food bonanzas. Behavioral Ecology, 10(4), 377-390. | ||
41. Mitchell, M. (1996). An introduction to genetic algorithms. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. | ||
42. Murciano, A., & del R. Mill´an, J. (1997). Learning signaling behaviors and specialization in cooperative agents. Adaptive Behavior, 5(5), 5-28. | ||
43. Murciano, A., del R. Mill´an, J., & Zamora, J. (1997). Specialization in multi-agent systems through learning. Biological Cybernetics, 76, 375-382. | ||
44. Newman, J. A., & Caraco, T. (1989). Co-operative and non-co-operative bases of food-calling. Journal of Theoretical Biology, 141, 197-209. | ||
45. Noble, J., & Cliff, D. (1996). On simulating the evolution of communication. In P. Maes, M. J. Mataric, J.-A. Meyer, J. Pollack, & S. W. Wilson (Eds.), From animals to animats 4 (pp. 608-617). Cape Cod, MA: MIT Press. | UIUC | |
46. Nowak, R. (1991). Walker's mammals of the world. Vol. 1. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press. | ||
47. Oliphant, M., & Batali, J. (1997). Learning and the emergence of coordinated communication. Center for Research on Language Newsletter, 11(1); http://crl.ucsd.edu/newsletter/11-1/. | UIUC | |
48. Owings, D. H., & Morton, E. S. (1998). Animal vocal communication: A new approach. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. | ||
49. Parisi, D. (1997). An artificial life approach to language. Brain and Language, 59, 121-146. | UIUC | |
50. Robinson, S. R. (1981). Alarm communication in Belding's ground squirrels. Zeitschrift f¨ur Tierpsychologie, 56, 150-168. | ||
51. Sayigh, L. S., Tyack, P. L., Wells, R. S., Scott, M. D., & Irvine, A. B. (1995). Sex difference in signature whistle production of free-ranging bottlenose dolphins, Tursiops truncatus. Behavioral and Ecological Sociobiology, 36, 171-177. | ||
52. Slobodchikoff, C. N., Kiriazis, J., Fischer, C., & Creef, E. (1991). Semantic information distinguishing individual predators in the alarm calls of Gunnison's prairie dogs. Animal Behaviour, 42, 713-719. | ||
53. Smith, J. M. (1982). Evolution and the theory of games. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. | ||
54. Smith, W. J. (1977). The behavior of communicating. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. | ||
55. Steels, L. (1996). Perceptually grounded meaning creation. In M. Tokoro (Ed.), Proceedings of ICMAS-96, Kyoto. Menlo Park, CA: AAAI Press. | UIUC | |
56. Steels, L. (1997). Synthesising the origins of language and meaning using co-evolution, self-organisation and level formation. In J. Hurford, C. Knight, & M. Studdert-Kennedy (Eds.), Evolution of Human Language. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. | UIUC | |
57. Steels, L. (1997). The synthetic modeling of language origins. Evolution of Communication, 1(1), 1-34. | UIUC | |
58. Werner, G. M., & Dyer, M. G. (1991). Evolution of communication in artificial organisms. In C. Langton (Ed.), Artificial Life II (pp. 659-87). Santa Fe Institute Studies in the Sciences of Complexity, Vol. 10. Redwood City, CA: Addison-Wesley. | UIUC | |
59. Werner, G. M., & Dyer, M. G. (1994). Bioland: A massively parallel simulation environment for evolving distributed forms of intelligent behavior. In H. Kitano (Ed.), Massively Parallel AI (pp. 317-349). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. | ||
60. Werner, G. M., & Todd, P. M. (1997). Too many love songs: Sexual selection and the evolution of communication. In P. Husbands & I. Harvey (Eds.), Fourth European conference on artificial intelligence (pp. 434-443). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press/Bradford Books. | UIUC | |
61. Winograd, T., & Flores, F. (1987). Understanding computers and cognition. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley. |
| HOME :: Back to the Paper :: References | Comments to: junwang4 you-know-at gmail.com | Last update: 2/3/09 |