John b. Haviland
Marieke Schouwstra, Yasmin Motamedi, Kenny Smith, Simon Kirby
Ashley Micklos
Przemysław Żywiczyński, Sylwester Orzechowski & Sławomir Wacewicz
Kaori Tamura & Takashi Hashimoto
Emily Carrigan & Marie Coppola
Catriona Silvey, Molly Flaherty, Susan Goldin-Meadow, Simon Kirby, Kenny Smith
Vinicius Macuch Silva, Seán Roberts
Abstract:
We conducted a graphical communication task to examine what kinds of devices are effective for communication to tell what the partner does not know. During the task, the sender and receiver mutually formed hypotheses about the partner’s intentions to correct misunderstandings. Repetitive interaction facilitated the frequent changes of drawings and caused the change of symbol system from iconic to figurative.
Citation:
Tamura K. & Hashimoto T. (2016) Repetitive Mutual Hypothesizing Induces Change of Symbol Systems in Graphical Communication. In S. Roberts & G. Mills (Eds.) Proceedings of EvoLang XI, Language Adapts to Interaction Workshop, 21 March, 2016. Available online: http://evolang.org/neworleans/workshops/papers/LATI_6.html