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Smith, K. and Hurford, J. (2003) Language Evolution in Populations: extending the Iterated Learning Model. In ECAL03, pages 507--516.

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1. J. Batali. The negotiation and acquisition of recursive grammars as a result of competition among exemplars. In Briscoe [3], pages 111--172.

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2. H. Brighton and S. Kirby. The survival of the smallest: Stability conditions for the cultural evolution of compositional language. In Kelemen and Sosk [6], pages 592--601.

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3. E. Briscoe, editor. Linguistic Evolution through Language Acquisition: Formal and Computational Models. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2002.

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4. J. R. Hurford. Social transmission favours linguistic generalization. In Knight et al. [11], pages 324--352.

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5. J. R. Hurford. Expression/induction models of language evolution: dimensions and issues. In Briscoe [3], pages 301--344.

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6. J. Kelemen and P. Sosk, editors. Advances in Artificial Life: Proceedings of the 6th European Conference on Artificial Life. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 2001.

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8. S. Kirby. Syntax out of learning: the cultural evolution of structured communication in a population of induction algorithms. In D. Floreano, J. D. Nicoud, and F. Mondada, editors, Advances in Artificial Life: Proceedings of the 5th European Conference on Artificial Life. Springer, Berlin, 1999.

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9. S. Kirby. Syntax without natural selection: how compositionality emerges from vocabulary in a population of learners. In Knight et al. [11], pages 303--323.

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10. S. Kirby. Learning, bottlenecks and the evolution of recursive syntax. In Briscoe [3], pages 173--203.

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11. C. Knight, M. Studdert-Kennedy, and J.R. Hurford, editors. The Evolutionary Emergence of Language: Social Functions and the Origins of Linguistic Form. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2000.

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13. S. Ragir. Constraints on communities with indigenous sign languages: clues to the dynamics of language origins. In A. Wray, editor, The Transition to Language, pages 272--294. Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2002.

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14. G. K. Zipf. Human behaviour and the principle of least effort : an introduction to human ecology. Addison-Wesley, Cambridge, MA, 1949.

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15. W. H. Zuidema. Emergent syntax: The unremitting value of computational modeling for understanding the origins of complex language. In Kelemen and Sosk [6], pages 641--644.

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