Research

“For a privileged minority, Western democracy provides the ability to seek behind the veil of distortion and misrepresentation, ideology and class interest”

Noam Chomsky

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Cutting Derivational Options

Natural Language & Linguistic Theory, 19-4, 891-900 Lappin, Levine and Johnson (LLJ) categorize my first reply to their piece as something ’which addresses our main objection to the MP by attempting to present a substantive defense of economy conditions in the theory of grammar’. This is why I chose the paradigm I did, among other […]
By Juan Uriagereka
November 1, 2001

Doubling and possession

Clitics in phonology, morphology and syntax, 405-431 This paper explores the conjecture that clitic doubling in languages like Spanish shares some fundamental aspects of the semantics of inalienable possession, especially if understood in terms of a syntax of the kind originally advocated by Szabolcsi (1983). A few paradigms are discussed where this correlation would explain […]
By Juan Uriagereka
February 1, 2001

Conditions enabling the emergence of inter-agent signaling in an artificial world

Artificial Life, 2001, 7(1), 3-31 In the research described here we extend past computational investigations of animal signaling by studying an artificial world in which a population of initially noncommunicating agents evolves to communicate about food sources and predators. Signaling in this world can be either beneficial (e.g., warning of nearby predators) or costly (e.g., […]
By James A. Reggia, Reiner Schulz, Juan Uriagereka, Gerald S. Wilkinson
January 1, 2001

On the Emptiness of Design Polemics

Natural Language & Linguistic Theory, 18 (3), 863-71 Lappin, Levine and Johnson (henceforth ‘LLJ’) are concerned about the field gravitating towards the Minimalist Program (MP) without having exhausted the possibilities of the ‘Government and Binding’ (GB) theory.1 In this reply, I concentrate on a concrete paradigm that has resisted a GB analysis. Since LLJ attack […]
By Juan Uriagereka
November 1, 2000

A Simulation Environment for Evolving Multiagent Communication

Digital Repository at the University of Maryland A simulation environment has been created to support study of emergent communication. Multiple agents exist in a two-dimensional world where they must find food and avoid predators. While non-communicating agents may survive, the world is configured so that survival and fitness can be enhanced through the use of […]
By James A. Reggia, Reiner Schulz, Juan Uriagereka, Gerald S. Wilkinson
September 1, 2000