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Hurford, J. (1987) Language and Number: the emergence of a cognitive system. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.

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Briscoe, Language as a Complex Adaptive System: Coevolution of Language and of the Language Acquisition Device, 1998 :: 15
Briscoe, The Acquisition of Grammar in an Evolving Population of Language Agents, 1999 :: 10
Briscoe, Grammatical Acquisition: Inductive Bias and Coevolution of Language and the Language Acquisition Device, 2000 :: 36
Briscoe, Evolutionary Perspectives on Diachronic Syntax, 2000 :: 17
Briscoe, Grammatical Acquisition and Linguistic Selection, 2002 :: 22
Christiansen,Kirby, Language Evolution: Consensus and Controversies, 2003 :: 14
Dowman, Modeling Language as a Product of Learning and Social Interactions, 2003 ::
Dowman, Explaining Color Term Typology as the Product of Cultural Evolution using a Multi-agent Model, 2003 :: 3
Dowman, Colour Terms, Syntax and Bayes: Modelling Acquisition and Evolution, 2004 ::
Dowman, Investigating the Effect of Random Noise on the Evolution of Colour Terms, 2005 ::
Eddy, Iterated Learning: The Exemplar-based Learning Approach, 2005 ::
Hurford, Biological evolution of the Saussurean sign as a component of the language acquisition device, 1989 :: 102
Hurford, Social transmission favours linguistic generalization, 2000 :: 34
Hurford, The Neural Basis of Predicate-Argument Structure, 2003 :: 11
Hurford, A performed practice explains a linguistic universal: Counting gives the Packing Strategy, 2007 ::
Ke, Self-organization and Language Evolution: System, Population and Individual, 2004 :: 4
Kirby,Hurford, Learning, culture and evolution in the origin of linguistic constraints, 1997 :: 54
Kirby, Function, Selection and Innateness: the Emergence of Language Universals, 1996 :: 6
Kirby, Language evolution without natural selection: From vocabulary to syntax in a population of learners, 1998 :: 15
Kirby, Learning, Bottlenecks and Infinity: a working model of the evolution of syntactic communication, 1999 :: 5
Kirby, Syntax without Natural Selection: How compositionality emerges from vocabulary in a population of learners, 2000 :: 81
Kirby, Learning, Bottlenecks and the Evolution of Recursive Syntax, 2002 :: 86
Parker, Evolution as a Constraint on Theories of Syntax: The Case against Minimalism, 2006 :: 1
Parker, Evolving the narrow language faculty: was recursion the pivotal step?, 2006 :: 2
Smith, The Transmission of Language: models of biological and cultural evolution, 2003 :: 15
Wedel, Self-organization and categorical behavior in phonology, 2004 :: 3

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