Albin, P., & Foley, D. K. (1990). Decentralized, dispersed exchange without an auctioneer: A simulation study. Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 18(1), 27-51. | ||
Arends, J. (1995). Demographic factors in the formation of Sranan. In J. Arends (Ed.), The early stages of creolization (pp. 233-285). Amsterdam: John Benjamins. | ||
Arends, J., Muysken, P., & Smith, N. (Eds.). (1994). Pidgins and creoles: An introduction. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. | ||
Axelrod, R. (1993). A model of the emergence of new political actors (Working Paper 93-11-068). Santa Fe, NM: Santa Fe Institute. | ||
Axelrod, R. (1995). The convergence and stability of cultures: Local convergence and global polarization (Working Paper 95-03-028). Santa Fe, NM: Santa Fe Institute. | ||
Bickerton, D. (1984). The language bioprogram hypothesis. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 7, 212-218. | UIUC | |
Bickerton, D. (1988). Creole languages and the bioprogram. In F. Newmeyer (Ed.), Linguistics: The Cambridge survey (pp. 267-284). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. | ||
Bickerton, D. (1992). The sociohistorical matrix of creolization. Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages, 7, 307-318. | ||
Bickerton, D. (1999). How to acquire language without positive evidence: What acquisitionists can learn from creoles. In M. DeGraff (Ed.), Language creation and language change (pp. 49-74). Cambridge: MIT Press. | ||
Briscoe, T. (2000). Grammatical acquisition: Inductive bias and coevolution of language and the language acquisition device. Language, 76(2), 245-296. | UIUC | |
Chomsky, N. (1981). Lectures on government and binding. Dordrecht, the Netherlands: Foris. | ||
Chomsky, N. (1986). Knowledge of language: Its nature, origin, and use. New York: Praeger. | ||
Chomsky, N. (1995). The minimalist program. Cambridge: MIT Press. | ||
Epstein, J., & Axtell, R. (1996). Growing artificial societies. Cambridge: MIT Press/Brookings Institution. 294 SOCIAL SCIENCE COMPUTER REVIEW | ||
Gumperz, J. (1971). Language in social groups. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. | ||
Kirby, S. (1998). Fitness and the selective adaptation of language. In J. Hurford, M. Studdert-Kennedy, & C. Knight (Eds.), Approaches to the evolution of language (pp. 359-383). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. | UIUC | |
Migge, B. (2000). The origin of the syntax and semantics of property items in Surinamese plantation creole. In J. McWhorter (Ed.), Language change and language contact in pidgins and creoles (pp. 201-234). Amsterdam: John Benjamins. | ||
Resnick, M. (1994). Turtles, termites, and traffic jams: Explorations in massively parallel microworlds. Cambridge: MIT Press. | ||
Satterfield, T. (1999). Bilingual selection of syntactic knowledge. Dordrecht, the Netherlands: Kluwer. | ||
Schelling, T. (1969). Models of segregation. American Economic Review, 59(2), 488-493. | ||
Schelling, T. (1971). Dynamic models of segregation. Journal of Mathematical Sociology, 1, 143-186. | ||
Sebba, M. (1998). Contact languages: Pidgins and creoles. New York: St. Martin's. | ||
Siegel, J. (1987). Language contact in a plantation environment. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Pres. | ||
Thomason, S. (1997). A typology of contact languages. In A. Spears &D.Winford (Eds.), The structure and status of pidgins and creoles (pp. 71-88). Amsterdam: John Benjamins. | ||
Thomason, S., & Kaufman, T. (1988). Language contact, creolization, and genetic linguistics. Berkeley: University of California Press. Teresa Satterfield is a member of the Department of Linguistics at the University of Michigan and is author of Bilingual Selection of Syntactic Knowledge: Extending the Principles and Parameters Approach (Dordrecht, the Netherlands: Kluwer, 1999). She can be contacted at the Department of Linguistics, University of Michigan, 1076 Frieze Bldg., Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109-1255; e-mail: tsatter@umich.edu. Satterfield / SWARM MODELING 295 |
| HOME :: Back to the Paper :: References | Comments to: junwang4 you-know-at gmail.com | Last update: 11/16/07 |