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@misc{cogprints4107,
volume = {233},
number = {3},
author = {Pierre-Yves Oudeyer},
title = {The Self-Organization of Speech Sounds},
publisher = {Elsevier},
journal = {Journal of Theoretical Biology},
pages = {435--449},
year = {2005},
keywords = {origins of speech,sounds,self-organization,self-organisation,evolution,forms,artificial systems,agents,phonetics,phonology,language,origins,vowels,consonants,phonemic coding,discrete,de Boer,Studdert-Kennedy,Goldstein,articulatory phonology,Lindblom,Hurford,neural network,neurons,learning,speech},
url = {http://cogprints.org/4107/},
abstract = {The speech code is a vehicle of language: it defines
a set of forms used by a community to carry information.
Such a code is necessary to support the linguistic
interactions that allow humans to communicate.
How then may a speech code be formed prior to the
existence of linguistic interactions?
Moreover, the human speech code is discrete and compositional,
shared by all the individuals of a community but different
across communities, and phoneme inventories are characterized by
statistical regularities. How can a speech code with these properties form?
We try to approach these questions in the paper,
using the ``methodology of the artificial''. We
build a society of artificial agents, and detail a mechanism that
shows the formation of a discrete speech code without pre-supposing
the existence of linguistic capacities or of coordinated interactions.
The mechanism is based on a low-level model of
sensory-motor interactions. We show that the integration of certain very
simple and non language-specific neural devices
leads to the formation of a speech code that
has properties similar to the human speech code.
This result relies on the self-organizing properties of a generic
coupling between perception and production
within agents, and on the interactions between agents.
The artificial system helps us to develop better intuitions on how speech
might have appeared, by showing how self-organization
might have helped natural selection to find speech.
}
}