Communication Drives the Emergence of Language Universals in Neural Agents: Evidence from the Word-order/Case-marking Trade-off
Artificial learners often behave differently from human learners in the context of neural agent-based simulations of language emergence and change. A common explanation is the lack of appropriate cognitive biases in these learners. However, it has also been proposed that more naturalistic settings o...
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Zusammenfassung: | Artificial learners often behave differently from human learners in the
context of neural agent-based simulations of language emergence and change. A
common explanation is the lack of appropriate cognitive biases in these
learners. However, it has also been proposed that more naturalistic settings of
language learning and use could lead to more human-like results. We investigate
this latter account focusing on the word-order/case-marking trade-off, a widely
attested language universal that has proven particularly hard to simulate. We
propose a new Neural-agent Language Learning and Communication framework
(NeLLCom) where pairs of speaking and listening agents first learn a miniature
language via supervised learning, and then optimize it for communication via
reinforcement learning. Following closely the setup of earlier human
experiments, we succeed in replicating the trade-off with the new framework
without hard-coding specific biases in the agents. We see this as an essential
step towards the investigation of language universals with neural learners. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2301.13083 |