Content area

Abstract

To depict the mechanisms that have enabled the emergence of semantic conventions, philosophers and researchers particularly access a game-theoretic model: the signaling game. In this article I argue that this model is also quite appropriate to analyze not only the emergence of a semantic convention, but also its change. I delineate how the application of signaling games helps to reproduce and depict mechanisms of semantic change. For that purpose I present a model that combines a signaling game with innovative reinforcement learning; in simulation runs I conduct this game repeatedly within a multi-agent setup, where agents are arranged in social network structures. The results of these runs are contrasted with an attested theory from sociolinguistics: the ‘weak tie’ theory. Analyses of the produced data target a deeper understanding of the role of environmental variables for the promotion of (1) semantic change or (2) solidity of semantic conventions.

Details

Title
The change of signaling conventions in social networks
Author
Mühlenbernd, Roland 1 

 Department of Linguistics, Eberhard Karls University Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany 
Pages
721-734
Publication year
2019
Publication date
Dec 2019
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
09515666
e-ISSN
14355655
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1980854572
Copyright
AI & SOCIETY is a copyright of Springer, (2017). All Rights Reserved.