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      Evolutionary models of color categorization based on discrimination

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      Journal of Mathematical Psychology
      Elsevier BV

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          The evolution of speech: a comparative review.

          The evolution of speech can be studied independently of the evolution of language, with the advantage that most aspects of speech acoustics, physiology and neural control are shared with animals, and thus open to empirical investigation. At least two changes were necessary prerequisites for modern human speech abilities: (1) modification of vocal tract morphology, and (2) development of vocal imitative ability. Despite an extensive literature, attempts to pinpoint the timing of these changes using fossil data have proven inconclusive. However, recent comparative data from nonhuman primates have shed light on the ancestral use of formants (a crucial cue in human speech) to identify individuals and gauge body size. Second, comparative analysis of the diverse vertebrates that have evolved vocal imitation (humans, cetaceans, seals and birds) provides several distinct, testable hypotheses about the adaptive function of vocal mimicry. These developments suggest that, for understanding the evolution of speech, comparative analysis of living species provides a viable alternative to fossil data. However, the neural basis for vocal mimicry and for mimesis in general remains unknown.
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            Computational and evolutionary aspects of language.

            Language is our legacy. It is the main evolutionary contribution of humans, and perhaps the most interesting trait that has emerged in the past 500 million years. Understanding how darwinian evolution gives rise to human language requires the integration of formal language theory, learning theory and evolutionary dynamics. Formal language theory provides a mathematical description of language and grammar. Learning theory formalizes the task of language acquisition it can be shown that no procedure can learn an unrestricted set of languages. Universal grammar specifies the restricted set of languages learnable by the human brain. Evolutionary dynamics can be formulated to describe the cultural evolution of language and the biological evolution of universal grammar.
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              Learning Through Reinforcement and Replicator Dynamics

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Mathematical Psychology
                Journal of Mathematical Psychology
                Elsevier BV
                00222496
                December 2007
                December 2007
                : 51
                : 6
                : 359-382
                Article
                10.1016/j.jmp.2007.06.001
                6bbf3238-8af4-4faa-b03b-d12ca548d5ba
                © 2007

                http://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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