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1998

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[77..54]    Approaches to the Evolution of Language: Social and Cognitive Bases
[53..51]  Artificial Life VI
[50..48]  Proceedings of the Twentieth Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society
[47..46]  COLING-ACL98
[45..44]    Evolution of Communication
[43..42]  ICMAS98
[41..40]  SAB98
[39..38]  PNAS
[37..36]    Behavioral and Brain Sciences
[35..34]  Proceedings of the Tenth Netherlands/Belgium Conference on Artificial Intelligence NAIC'98
[33] PDF (2)Arita, T. and Koyama, Y. (1998) Evolution of linguistic diversity in a simple communication system. Artificial Life, 4(1):109--124.
[32] PDF (15)Briscoe, E. J. (1998) Language as a Complex Adaptive System: Coevolution of Language and of the Language Acquisition Device. In H. van Halteren and et al., editors, Proceedings of Eighth Computational Linguistics in the Netherlands Conference.
[31] PDF (64)Cangelosi, A. and Parisi, D. (1998) The emergence of a language in an evolving population of neural networks. Connection Science, 10(2):83--97.
[30] PDF  Cohen, P. R. (1998) Growing Ontologies. Technical report, Computer Science Department, University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
[29] PDF (18)Di Paolo, E. A. (1998) An investigation into the evolution of communication. Adaptive Behavior, 6(2):285--324.
[28]   (49)Dunbar, R. (1998) Grooming, Gossip, and the Evolution of Language. Harvard Univ Press.
[27]   (5)Goldin-Meadow, S. and Mylander, C. (1998) Spontaneous sign systems created by deaf children in two cultures. Nature, 391(6664):279--281.
[26] PDF  Hashimoto, T. (1998) Development of Meaning Structure by Usage-based Word Relationships. In Masanori Sugisaka, editor, Proceedings of the Third International Symposium on Artificial Life and Robotics (AROB 3rd'98), pages 662--665.
[25] PDF (5)Hashimoto, T. (1998) Dynamics of Internal and Global Structure through Linguistic Interactions. In Multi-agent systems and Agent-Based Simulation, pages 124--139. Berlin: Springer-Verlag.
[24]   (10)Hazlehurst, B. and Hutchins, E. (1998) The Emergence of Propositions from the Co-ordination of Talk and Action in a Shared World. Language and Cognitive Processes, 13(2-3):373--424.
[23] PDF (4)Hurford, J. (1998) Review of ``The Symbolic Species: The co-evolution of language and the human brain'', by Terrence Deacon, 1997. The Times Literary Supplement, pages 34.
[22]   (55)Hurford, J., Studdert-Kennedy, M., and Knight, C. (1998) Approaches to the Evolution of Language: Social and Cognitive Bases. Cambridge University Press.
[21]   (3)Kaplan, F., Steels, L., and McIntyre, A. (1998) An architecture for evolving robust shared communication systems in noisy environments. In Proceedings of Sony Research Forum 1998. Tokyo.
[20] PDF (15)Kirby, S. (1998) Language evolution without natural selection: From vocabulary to syntax in a population of learners. Technical report, Language Evolution and Computation Research Unit, University of Edinburgh.
[19]    Krug, M. (1998) String frequency: a cognitive motivating factor in coalescence, language processing and linguistic change. Journal of English Linguistics, 26:286--320.
[18] PDF (5)Lewontin, R. C. (1998) The evolution of cognition: Questions we will never answer. In D. Scarborough and S. Sternberg, editors, An invitation to cognitive science, Volume 4: Methods, models, and conceptual issues. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
[17]   (5)Lieberman, P. (1998) Eve Spoke: Human Language and Human Evolution. University of California Press.
[16] PDF (6)MacWhinney, B. (1998) Models of the Emergence of Language. Annual Review of Psychology, 49:199--227.
[15]   (2)Nettle, D. (1998) Coevolution of phonology and the lexicon in twelve languages of West Africa. Journal of Quantitative Linguistics, 5(3):240--245.
[14] PDF (3)Nettle, D. (1998) Explaining global patterns of language diversity. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, 17(4):354--74.
[13] PDF (3)Niyogi, P. and Berwick, R. C. (1998) The Logical Problem of Language Change: A Case Study of European Portuguese. Syntax: A Journal of Theoretical, Experimental, and Interdisciplinary Research, 1(2):192--205.
[12] PDF (3)Noble, J. (1998) The Evolution of Animal Communication Systems: Questions of Function Examined through Simulation. PhD thesis, School of Cognitive and Computing Sciences, University of Sussex.
[11] PDF (26)Rizzolatti, G. and Arbib, M. A. (1998) Language within our grasp. Trends in Neurosciences, 21(5):188--194.
[10] PDF  Rubinstein, A. (1998) Economics and Language.
[9] PDF (4)Ryan, C., Collins, J. J., and O'Neill, M. (1998) Grammatical Evolution: Evolving Programs for an Arbitrary Language. In EuroGP 1998, pages 83--96.
[8] PDF (4)Steels, L. (1998) The Origin of Linguistic Categories. In The Evolution of Language (Selected papers from 2nd International Conference on the Evolution of Language. London.
[7] PDF (56)Steels, L. (1998) The origins of syntax in visually grounded robotic agents. Artificial Intelligence, 103(1-2):133--156.
[6] PDF (28)Steels, L. (1998) The Origins of Ontologies and Communication Conventions in Multi-Agent Systems. Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems, 1(2):169--194.
[5] PDF  Tonkes, B. (1998) Getting the Point Across: The Effect of Recurrent Network Biases on the Evolution of a Simple Language. Technical report.
[4] PDF (3)Tonkes, B., Blair, A., and Wiles, J. (1998) A paradox of neural encoders and decoders, or, why don't we talk backwards? In B. McKay and X. Yao and C. S. Newton and J.-H. Kim and T. Furuhashi, editors, Proceedings of the Second Asia-Pacific Conference on Simulated Evolution and Learning (SEAL98), pages 357--364. Springer.
[3] PDF (4)Vogt, P. (1998) The evolution of a lexicon and meaning in robotic agents through self-organization. In The 2nd International Conference on the Evolution of Language. London.
[2] PDF (2)Wang, W. S-Y. (1998) Language and the Evolution of Modern Humans. In K.Omoto and P.V.Tobias, editors, The Origins and Past of Modern Humans, pages 247--262. World Scientific.
[1]   (36)Wray, A. (1998) Protolanguage as a holistic system for social interaction. Language and Communication, 18(1):47--67.

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