creators_name: Oudeyer, P-Y. type: journalp datestamp: 2006-09-17 lastmod: 2011-03-11 08:56:36 metadata_visibility: show title: The self-organization of combinatoriality and phonotactics in vocalization systems ispublished: pub subjects: neuro-mod subjects: ling-phono full_text_status: public keywords: Origins of speech; Self-organization; Evolution; Phonetics; Phonology; Combinatoriality abstract: This paper shows how a society of agents can self-organize a shared vocalization system that is discrete, combinatorial and has a form of primitive phonotactics, starting from holistic inarticulate vocalizations. The originality of the system is that: (1) it does not include any explicit pressure for communication; (2) agents do not possess capabilities of coordinated interactions, in particular they do not play language games; (3) agents possess no specific linguistic capacities; and (4) initially there exists no convention that agents can use. As a consequence, the system shows how a primitive speech code may bootstrap in the absence of a communication system between agents, i.e. before the appearance of language. date: 2005 date_type: published publication: Connection Science volume: 17 number: 3-4 pagerange: 325-341 refereed: TRUE referencetext: J. Ameisen, La Sculpture du Vivant. Le Suicide Cellulaire ou la Mort Cratrice, Paris: Seuil, 2000. P. Ball, The Self-made Tapestry, Pattern Formation in Nature, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001. C. Browman and L. Goldstein, “Towards an articulatory phonology”, Phonology Yearb., 3, pp. 219–252, 1986. C. Browman and L. Goldstein, “Competing constraints on intergestural coordination and self-organization of phonological structures”, Bull. Commun. Parle, 5, pp. 25–34, 2000. A. Cangelosi, “Neural network models of category learning and language”, Brain Cognit., 53, pp. 106–107, 2003. A. Cangelosi and D. Parisi, Simulating the Evolution of Language, Berlin: Springer, 2002. J. Changeux and A. Danchin, “The selective stabilization of developing synapses: a plausible mechanism for the specification of neuronal networks”, Nature, 264, p. 705, 1976. B. de Boer, The Origins of Vowel Systems. Oxford Linguistics, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001. A. Ghosh, “Cortical development: with an eye on neurotrophins”, Curr. Biol., 6, pp. 130–133, 1996. F. Kaplan, La Naissance d’ une Langue chez les Robots, Paris: Hermes Science, 2001. S. Kirby, “Spontaneous evolution of linguistic structure—an iterated learning model of the emergence of regularity and irregularity”, IEEE Trans. Evolut. Comput., 5, pp. 102–110, 2001. T. Kohonen, “Self-organized formation of topologically correct feature maps”, Biol. Cybernet., 43, pp. 59–69, 1982. B. Lindblom, “Phonological units as adaptive emergents of lexical development”, in Phonological Development: Models, Research, Implications, C. Ferguson, L. Menn and C. Stoel-Gammon, Eds, Timonnium, MD: York Press, 1992, pp. 565–604. P.F. MacNeilage, “The frame/content theory of evolution of speech production”, Behav. Brain Sci., 21, pp. 499–511, 1998. P.-Y. Oudeyer, “The origins of syllable systems: an operational model”, in Proceedings of the 23rd Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, COGSCI’2001, J. Moore and K. Stenning, Eds, London: Laurence Erlbaum Associates, 2001, pp. 744–749. P.-Y. Oudeyer, “L’auto-organisation de la parole”, PhD thesis, Université Paris VI (2003). P.-Y. Oudeyer, “The self-organization of speech sounds”, J. Theor. Biol., 233, pp. 435–449, 2005. M.A. Redford, C.C. Chen and R. Miikkulainen, “Constrained emergence of universals and variation in syllable systems”, Language Speech, 44, pp. 27–56, 2001. G. Rizzolatti, L. Fadiga,V. Gallese and L. Fogassi, “Premotor cortex and the recognition of motor action”, Cognitive Brain Res., 3, pp. 131–141, 1996. J. Schwartz, L. Boë, N.Vallée and C. Abry, “Major trends in vowel systems inventories”, J. Phonet., 25, pp. 255–286, 1997a. J. Schwartz, L. Boë, N. Vallée and C. Abry, “The dispersion/focalization theory of vowel systems”, J. Phonet., 25, pp. 255–286, 1997b. L. Steels, “The synthetic modeling of language origins”, Evolut. Commun., 1, pp. 1–34, 1997. citation: Oudeyer, Dr. P-Y. (2005) The self-organization of combinatoriality and phonotactics in vocalization systems. [Journal (Paginated)] document_url: http://cogprints.org/5148/1/connectionScience.pdf