In recent decades, there has been a surge of interest in the origin of language across a wide range of disciplines. Emergentism provides a new perspective to integrate investigations from different areas of study. This paper discusses how the study of language acquisition can contribute to the inquiry, in particular when computer modeling is adopted as the research methodology. An agent-based model is described as an illustration, which simulates how word order in a language could have emerged at the very beginning of language origin. Two important features of emergence, heterogeneity and nonlinearity, are demonstrated in the model, and their implications for applied linguistics are discussed.
%0 Journal Article
%1 Jinyun2006
%A Jinyun, Ke
%A Holland, John H
%D 2006
%J Applied Linguistics
%K Adquisici{\'{o}}n Investigaci{\'{o}}n Ling{\"{u}}{\'{\i}}stica aplicada de
%T Language Origin from an Emergentist Perspective
%U http://ejournals.ebsco.com/direct.asp?ArticleID=4343812D17FBD4B02137
%V 27
%X In recent decades, there has been a surge of interest in the origin of language across a wide range of disciplines. Emergentism provides a new perspective to integrate investigations from different areas of study. This paper discusses how the study of language acquisition can contribute to the inquiry, in particular when computer modeling is adopted as the research methodology. An agent-based model is described as an illustration, which simulates how word order in a language could have emerged at the very beginning of language origin. Two important features of emergence, heterogeneity and nonlinearity, are demonstrated in the model, and their implications for applied linguistics are discussed.
%Z Language: eng
@article{Jinyun2006,
abstract = {In recent decades, there has been a surge of interest in the origin of language across a wide range of disciplines. Emergentism provides a new perspective to integrate investigations from different areas of study. This paper discusses how the study of language acquisition can contribute to the inquiry, in particular when computer modeling is adopted as the research methodology. An agent-based model is described as an illustration, which simulates how word order in a language could have emerged at the very beginning of language origin. Two important features of emergence, heterogeneity and nonlinearity, are demonstrated in the model, and their implications for applied linguistics are discussed.},
added-at = {2015-12-01T11:35:13.000+0100},
annote = {Language: eng},
author = {Jinyun, Ke and Holland, John H},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/29644356be4d3fb82ec6317084e80a7ce/sofiagruiz92},
interhash = {de8accaeb05b21f4e43ec3f54dcadedc},
intrahash = {9644356be4d3fb82ec6317084e80a7ce},
journal = {Applied Linguistics},
keywords = {Adquisici{\'{o}}n Investigaci{\'{o}}n Ling{\"{u}}{\'{\i}}stica aplicada de},
language = {eng},
timestamp = {2015-12-01T11:35:13.000+0100},
title = {{Language Origin from an Emergentist Perspective}},
url = {http://ejournals.ebsco.com/direct.asp?ArticleID=4343812D17FBD4B02137},
volume = 27,
year = 2006
}