Context-dependent communication under environmental constraints
This work addresses the challenge of understanding real-world communication dynamics for researchers in linguistics and AI, though it is incremental as it builds on existing signaling models.
The paper tackles the problem of how context-dependent communication emerges in situated scenarios, demonstrating that pressure to minimize vocabulary size is sufficient for its emergence and that environmental constraints can be exploited for near-perfect communication accuracy.
There is significant evidence that real-world communication cannot be reduced to sending signals with context-independent meaning. In this work, based on a variant of the classical Lewis (1969) signaling model, we explore the conditions for the emergence of context-dependent communication in a situated scenario. In particular, we demonstrate that pressure to minimise the vocabulary size is sufficient for such emergence. At the same time, we study the environmental conditions and cognitive capabilities that enable contextual disambiguation of symbol meanings. We show that environmental constraints on the receiver's referent choice can be unilaterally exploited by the sender, without disambiguation capabilities on the receiver's end. Consistent with common assumptions, the sender's awareness of the context appears to be required for contextual communication. We suggest that context-dependent communication is a situated multilayered phenomenon, crucially influenced by environment properties such as distribution of contexts. The model developed in this work is a demonstration of how signals may be ambiguous out of context, but still allow for near-perfect communication accuracy.