Categories provide a coarse grained description of the world. A fundamental question is whether categories simply mirror an underlying structure of nature, or instead come from the complex interactions of human beings among themselves and with the environment. Here we address this question by modelling a population of individuals who co-evolve their own system of symbols and meanings by playing elementary language games. The central result is the emergence of a hierarchical category structure made of two distinct levels: a basic layer, responsible for fine discrimination of the environment, and a shared linguistic layer that groups together perceptions to guarantee communicative success. Remarkably, the number of linguistic categories turns out to be finite and small, as observed in natural languages.
%0 Journal Article
%1 puglisi07
%A Puglisi, A.
%A Baronchelli, A.
%A Loreto, V.
%D 2007
%K 2007 RMP_CFL baronchelli categories colors continuum discrete loreto naming puglisi
%T Cultural route to the emergence of linguistic categories
%X Categories provide a coarse grained description of the world. A fundamental question is whether categories simply mirror an underlying structure of nature, or instead come from the complex interactions of human beings among themselves and with the environment. Here we address this question by modelling a population of individuals who co-evolve their own system of symbols and meanings by playing elementary language games. The central result is the emergence of a hierarchical category structure made of two distinct levels: a basic layer, responsible for fine discrimination of the environment, and a shared linguistic layer that groups together perceptions to guarantee communicative success. Remarkably, the number of linguistic categories turns out to be finite and small, as observed in natural languages.
@article{puglisi07,
abstract = {Categories provide a coarse grained description of the world. A fundamental question is whether categories simply mirror an underlying structure of nature, or instead come from the complex interactions of human beings among themselves and with the environment. Here we address this question by modelling a population of individuals who co-evolve their own system of symbols and meanings by playing elementary language games. The central result is the emergence of a hierarchical category structure made of two distinct levels: a basic layer, responsible for fine discrimination of the environment, and a shared linguistic layer that groups together perceptions to guarantee communicative success. Remarkably, the number of linguistic categories turns out to be finite and small, as observed in natural languages.},
added-at = {2007-09-23T16:59:24.000+0200},
author = {Puglisi, A. and Baronchelli, A. and Loreto, V.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2a89840874753e6c39f6866dad812e9b3/vittorio.loreto},
interhash = {548452f047a3acb6059dc690ddca649f},
intrahash = {a89840874753e6c39f6866dad812e9b3},
keywords = {2007 RMP_CFL baronchelli categories colors continuum discrete loreto naming puglisi},
timestamp = {2007-09-23T16:59:24.000+0200},
title = {Cultural route to the emergence of linguistic categories},
year = 2007
}