Speakers use different language to communicate with partners in different communities. But how do we learn and represent which conventions to use with which partners? In this paper, we argue that solving this challenging computational problem requires speakers to supplement their lexical representations with knowledge of social group structure. We formalize this idea by extending a recent hierarchical Bayesian model of convention formation with an intermediate layer explicitly representing the latent communities each partner belongs to, and derive predictions about how conventions formed within a group ought to extend to new in-group and out-group members. We then present evidence from two behavioral experiments testing these predictions ...
Grammatical agreement means that features associated with one linguistic unit (for example number or...
Grammatical agreement means that features associated with one linguistic unit (for example number or...
We investigate how humans leverage sparse observations of social interaction to infer the rich inter...
Languages differ in their complexity. One possible explanation for this observation is that differen...
Languages differ in their complexity. One possible explanation for this observation is that differen...
Lewis (1969) invented signaling games to show that meaning convention can arise simply from regulari...
ABSTRACT: Lewis (1969) invented signaling games to show that meaning convention can arise simply fro...
Recent experimental and computational modelling work has found that languages are shaped by the refe...
It is largely acknowledged that natural languages emerge from not just human brains, but also from r...
A compositionality-regularity coevolution model is adopted to explore the effect of social structure...
In this paper we discuss the socialization hypothesis—the idea that speakers of the same (linguistic...
This article adopts the category game model, which simulates the origins and evolution of linguistic...
Traditionally, the sociolinguistic approach to the study of codeswitching has taken social structure...
<div><p>Grammatical agreement means that features associated with one linguistic unit (for example n...
Societal norms or conventions help identify one of many appropriate behaviors during an interaction ...
Grammatical agreement means that features associated with one linguistic unit (for example number or...
Grammatical agreement means that features associated with one linguistic unit (for example number or...
We investigate how humans leverage sparse observations of social interaction to infer the rich inter...
Languages differ in their complexity. One possible explanation for this observation is that differen...
Languages differ in their complexity. One possible explanation for this observation is that differen...
Lewis (1969) invented signaling games to show that meaning convention can arise simply from regulari...
ABSTRACT: Lewis (1969) invented signaling games to show that meaning convention can arise simply fro...
Recent experimental and computational modelling work has found that languages are shaped by the refe...
It is largely acknowledged that natural languages emerge from not just human brains, but also from r...
A compositionality-regularity coevolution model is adopted to explore the effect of social structure...
In this paper we discuss the socialization hypothesis—the idea that speakers of the same (linguistic...
This article adopts the category game model, which simulates the origins and evolution of linguistic...
Traditionally, the sociolinguistic approach to the study of codeswitching has taken social structure...
<div><p>Grammatical agreement means that features associated with one linguistic unit (for example n...
Societal norms or conventions help identify one of many appropriate behaviors during an interaction ...
Grammatical agreement means that features associated with one linguistic unit (for example number or...
Grammatical agreement means that features associated with one linguistic unit (for example number or...
We investigate how humans leverage sparse observations of social interaction to infer the rich inter...