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keywords:
interactive behavior
evolution
agent-based modeling
intelligent agents
linguistics
Differential Case Marking (DCM) refers to the selective use of grammatical case marking based on semantic, pragmatic, or other factors. The emergence of DCM has been studied in artificial language learning experiments with human participants, which were specifically aimed at disentangling the effects of learning from those of communication (Smith & Culbertson, 2020). Meanwhile, multi-agent reinforcement learning frameworks based on neural networks have gained significant interest to simulate the emergence of human-like linguistic phenomena. In this study, we employ such a framework in which agents first acquire an artificial language before engaging in communicative interactions, enabling direct comparisons to human results. Using a very generic communication optimization algorithm and neural-network learners that have no prior experience with language or semantic preferences, our results demonstrate that learning alone does not lead to DCM, but when agents communicate, differential use of markers arises. This supports Smith & Culbertson (2020)'s findings highlighting the critical role of communication in shaping DCM and showcases the potential of neural-agent models to complement experimental research on language evolution.
