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Christiansen, M. H., Reali, F., and Chater, N. (2006) The Baldwin effect works for functional, but not arbitrary, features of language. In Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on the Evolution of Language, pages 27--34.

References (may not be complete)  [Original format]  [Sort by year]  [Sort by author]  [Sort by citations]

Baldwin, A new factor in evolution, 1896 :: 37
Bloom, How children learn the meanings of words, 2002 :: 27
Briscoe, Grammatical Assimilation, 2003 :: 10
Bybee, A Functionalist Approach to Grammar and its Evolution, 1998 :: 5
Chater,Christiansen,Reali, Is coevolution of language and language genes possible, 2004 :: 1
Chomsky, Aspects of the theory of syntax, 1965 :: 88
Dawkins, The selfish gene, 1976 :: 54
Hinton,Nowlan, How learning can guide evolution, 1987 :: 31
Nowak,Komarova,Niyogi, Evolution of universal grammar, 2001 :: 90
Odling-Smee,Laland,Feldman, Niche construction: The neglected process in evolution, 2003 :: 5
Pinker,Bloom, Natural language and natural selection, 1990 :: 168
Tomasello, On the different origin of symbols and grammar, 2003 :: 1
Weber,Depew, Evolution and learning: The Baldwin effect reconsidered, 2003 :: 2