Title of article
Finite populations choose an optimal language
Author/Authors
Pawlowitsch، نويسنده , , Christina، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
11
From page
606
To page
616
Abstract
This paper studies the evolution of a proto-language in a finite population under the frequency-dependent Moran process. A proto-language can be seen as a collection of concept-to-sign mappings. An efficient proto-language is a bijective mapping from objects of communication to used signs and vice versa. Based on the comparison of fixation probabilities, a method for deriving conditions of evolutionary stability in a finite population [Nowak et al., 2004. Emergence of cooperation and evolutionary stability in finite populations. Nature 428, 246–650], it is shown that efficient proto-languages are the only strategies that are protected by selection, which means that no mutant strategy can have a fixation probability that is greater than the inverse population size. In passing, the paper provides interesting results about the comparison of fixation probabilities as well as Maynard Smithʹs notion of evolutionary stability for finite populations [Maynard Smith, 1988. Can a mixed strategy be stable in a finite population? J. Theor. Biol. 130, 247–251] that are generally true for games with a symmetric payoff function.
Keywords
Language evolution , evolutionary stability , fixation probabilities , Moran process
Journal title
Journal of Theoretical Biology
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Journal of Theoretical Biology
Record number
1539014
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