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Book Chapter
Evolving Communication without Dedicated Communication Channels
Book Series
Lecture Notes in Computer Science
Publisher
Springer Berlin / Heidelberg
ISSN
0302-9743 (Print) 1611-3349 (Online)
Volume
Volume 2159/2001
Book
Advances in Artificial Life
DOI
10.1007/3-540-44811-X
Copyright
2001
ISBN
978-3-540-42567-0
DOI
10.1007/3-540-44811-X_38
Pages
357-366
Subject Collection
Computer Science
SpringerLink Date
Monday, January 01, 2001
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Evolving Communication without Dedicated Communication Channels
Matt Quinn
2
(2)
Centre for Computational Neuroscience and Robotics, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK
Abstract
Artificial Life models have consistently implemented communication as an exchange of signals over dedicated and functionally isolated channels. I argue that such a feature prevents models from providing a satisfactory account of the origins of communication and present a model in which there are no dedicated channels. Agents controlled by neural networks and equipped with proximity sensors and wheels are presented with a co-ordinated movement task. It is observed that functional, but non-communicative, behaviours which evolve in the early stages of the simulation both make possible, and form the basis of, the communicative behaviour which subsequently evolves.
Matt
Quinn
Email:
matthewq@cogs.susx.ac.uk
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