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[86..65]    The Evolutionary Emergence of Language: Social Function and the Origins of Linguistic Form
[64..62]    Journal of Theoretical Biology
[61..59]    SAB00
[58..56]    Artificial Life
[55..54]    Science
[53..52]    Trends in Ecology and Evolution
[51..50]    Nature
[49..48]    Artificial Life VII
[47]   (21)Aitchison, J. (2000) The Seeds of Speech: Language Origin and Evolution. Cambridge Univ Press.
[46]    Arita, T. (2000) Artificial Life: A Constructive Approach to the Origin/Evolution of Life, Society, and Language.
[45]    Best, M. L. (2000) Microevolutionary Language Theory. PhD thesis, School of Architecture and Planning, MIT.
[44]   (60)Bloom, P. (2000) How Children Learn the Meanings of Words. MIT Press.
[43]   (12)Briscoe, E. J. (2000) Evolutionary Perspectives on Diachronic Syntax. In Pintzuk, S. and Tsoulas, G. and Warner, A., editors, Diachronic Syntax: Models and Mechanisms.
[42]   (43)Briscoe, E. J. (2000) Grammatical Acquisition: Inductive Bias and Coevolution of Language and the Language Acquisition Device. Language, 76(2):245--296.
[41]    Calvin, W. H. and Bickerton, D. (2000) Lingua ex Machina. MIT Press.
[40]   (35)Cangelosi, A., Greco, A., and Harnad, S. (2000) From robotic toil to symbolic theft: Grounding transfer from entry-level to higher-level categories. Connection Science, 12(2):143--162.
[39]    Cohen, P. R. (2000) Learning Concepts by Interaction. Technical report, Computer Science Department, University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
[38]   (96)Croft, W. (2000) Explaining Language Change: An Evolutionary Approach. London: Longman.
[37]   (5)Deacon, T. W. (2000) Evolutionary perspectives on language and brain plasticity. Journal of Communication Disorders, 33(4):273--291.
[36]   (15)Di Paolo, E. A. (2000) Behavioral coordination, structural congruence and entrainment in a simulation of acoustically coupled agents. Adaptive Behavior, 8(1):25--46.
[35]    Egashira, S. and Hashimoto, T. (2000) The Formation of Common Norms on the Assumption of `Fundamentally' Imperfect Information. In Rosaria Conte and Chris Dellarocas, editors, Social Order in Multiagent Systems: Workshop on Norms and Institutions in Multi-Agent Systems (Held in conjunction with Autonomous Agents'2000).
[34]   (58)Fitch, W. T. (2000) The evolution of speech: a comparative review. Trends in cognitive sciences, 4(7):258--267.
[33]    Gmytrasiewicz, P. J. and Gopal, D. (2000) Towards Automating the Evolution of Linguistic Competence in Artificial Agents. In Agents'2000: Workshop on Agent Communication Languages. Barcelona, Spain.
[32]    Gmytrasiewicz, P. J. and Huhns, M. N. (2000) The Emergence of Language Among Autonomous Agents. IEEE Internet Computing, 4(4):90--92.
[31]    Grim, P., Kokalis, T., Tafti, A., and Kilb, N. (2000) Evolution of Communication with a Spatialized Genetic Algorithm. Technical report, Department of Philosophy, SUNY at Stony Brooks.
[30]   (4)Kaplan, F. (2000) Talking aibo: First experimentation of verbal interactions with an autonomous four-legged robot. In Proceedings of the CELE-Twente workshop on interacting agents.
[29]   (50)Knight, C., Hurford, J., and Studdert-Kennedy, M. (2000) The Evolutionary Emergence of Language: Social Function and the Origins of Linguistic Form. Cambridge University Press.
[28]   (22)Lieberman, P. (2000) Human language and our reptilian brain: The subcortical bases of speech, syntax, and thought. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
[27]    Livingstone, D. (2000) Computational Models of Language Change and Diversity. In Workshop on the Evolution of Language in Belgium and the Netherlands. Brussels.
[26]    Meyer, B. (2000) Principles of Language Design and Evolution. In Millenial Perspectives in Computer Science (Proceedings of the 1999 Oxford-Microsoft Symposium in Honour of Sir Tony Hoare), pages 229--246.
[25]   (4)Morris, W. C., Cottrell, G. W., and Elman, J. L. (2000) A connectionist simulation of the empirical acquisition of grammatical relations. In Stefan Wermter and Run Sun, editors, Hybrid Neural Symbolic Integration. Springer Verlag.
[24]    Newmeyer, F. J. (2000) Review of three book-length studies of language evolution. Journal of Linguistics.
[23]    Nowak, M. A. (2000) Homo grammaticus. Natural History, 109:36--44.
[22]   (8)Nowak, M. A. (2000) Evolutionary biology of language. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 355(1403):1615--1622.
[21]    O'Neill, M. and Ryan, C. (2000) Crossover in Grammatical Evolution: A Smooth Operator? In EuroGP 2000, pages 149--162.
[20]    Owren, M. J. (2000) Standing evolution on its head: The uneasy role of evolutionary theory in comparative cognition and communication. Reviews in Anthropology, 29:55--69.
[19]    Perfors, A. (2000) Simulated Evolution of Communication: The Emergence of Meaning. Master thesis, Department of Linguistics, Stanford University.
[18]    Popescu-Belis, A. and Batali, J. (2000) Incremental Simulations of the Emergence of Grammar: Towards Complex Sentence-Meaning Mappings. In Third International Conference on the Evolution of Language, pages 187--190.
[17]    Rubinstein, A. (2000) Economics and Language. Cambridge University Press.
[16]    Satterfield, T. (2000) The Socio-Genetic Solution: A New Look At Language Genesis Through Swarm Modeling. Technical report, Center for the Study of Complex Systems, University of Michigan.
[15]    Steels, L. (2000) A brain for language. In Proceedings of the Third Sony CSL Paris Symposium: The ecological brain. Paris.
[14]    Steels, L. (2000) Mirror Neurons and the Action Theory of Language Origins. In Architectures of the Mind, Architectures of the Brain.
[13]   (5)Steels, L. (2000) The puzzle of language evolution. Kognitionswissenschaft, 8(4):143--150.
[12]   (16)Steels, L. (2000) The Emergence of Grammar in Communicating Autonomous Robotic Agents. In Horn, Werner, editor, ECAI2000, pages 764--769. Amsterdam: IOS Press.
[11]   (42)Steels, L. (2000) Language as a Complex Adaptive System. In Schoenauer, M., editor, Proceedings of PPSN VI. Berlin, Germany: Springer-Verlag.
[10]    Tonkes, B., Blair, A., and Wiles, J. (2000) Evolving learnable languages. In S. A. Solla and T. K. Leen and K.-R.Muller, editors, Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems 12, (NIPS*99), pages 66--72. MIT Press.
[9]   (16)Trapa, P. E. and Nowak, M. A. (2000) Nash equilibria for an evolutionary language game. Journal of Mathematical Biology, 41(2):172--188.
[8]   (18)Vogt, P. (2000) Lexicon Grounding on Mobile Robots. PhD thesis, Vrije Universiteit Brussel.
[7]   (11)Yang, C. D. (2000) Internal and external forces in language change. Language Variation and Change, 12(3):231--250.
[6]    Zuidema, W. (2000) Evolution of syntax in groups of agents. Master thesis, Theoretical Biology, Utrecht University.
[5]   (6)Zuidema, W. and Hogeweg, P. (2000) Selective advantages of syntactic language - a model study. In Proceedings of the Twenty-second Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, pages 577--582. Hillsdale, USA: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
[4]   (8)de Boer, B. (2000) Emergence of vowel systems through self-organisation. AI Communications, 13(1):27--39.
[3]   (59)de Boer, B. (2000) Self-organization in vowel systems. Journal of Phonetics, 28(4):441--465.
[2]   (9)de Jong, E. D. (2000) Autonomous Formation of Concepts and Communication. PhD thesis, Vrije Universiteit Brussel.
[1]    de Lara, J. and Alfonseca, M. (2000) Some strategies for the simulation of vocabulary agreement in multi-agent communities. Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation, 3(4).

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