Dear All,
The CEU Department of Cognitive Science cordially invites you to the following
talk<https://events.ceu.edu/2026-01-07/departmental-colloquium-olivier-m…
by:
Speaker: Olivier
Morin<http://www.institutnicod.org/membres/membres-statutaires/morin-oli…
(Institut Jean Nicod)
Time: 4pm (to 6 pm) CET
Date: Wednesday, 7th January 2026
Venue: D001 (QS Vienna) and Zoom:
https://ceu-edu.zoom.us/j/92052279253?pwd=5fK9ZXAspOJCVearHyheYSSmrp01cI.1
Meeting ID: 920 5227 9253
Passcode: 193807
Chair: Christophe Heintz
Title: How well designed are languages and other tools for communication?
Abstract:
A fruitful framework in cognitive science studies communication systems as a well-designed
and efficient tool for communication. In this view, several features of language and other
communication systems (non-human communication, non-lingustic codes, etc.) can be
explained as adaptive solutions to the challenges of information transmission. Famous
examples include the law of abbreviation, showing that frequent words or signals tend to
be short or simple, saving cognitive and articulatory costs; or the combinatoriality of
signals, whereby words and phonemes (but also other signals and their components) are made
up from combinations of discrete elements or features, making symbols distinctive and
numerous but still easy to store and produce. I will argue that this "efficient
design" view of communication systems is incomplete at best. It lacks a mechanistic
foundation—some account of how communication systems came to be efficiently designed. It
lacks credible null hypotheses telling us what communication look like if it were not
efficiently designed. I will illustrate this point with two studies. The first considers
the law of abbreviation. This law, as it occurs in natural languages, fails to satisfy the
prediction of the standard, efficiency-based account, inherited from Zipf. It is
systematically weak, and always accompanied by heteroskedasticity. I propose a cultural
evolutionary account that explains these features of the law of abbreviation, and the law
itself, without assuming any selection for efficient communication. The second study looks
at combinatoriality in letters. Like the sounds of languages, letter shapes combine
distinct features to create multiple shapes (like the arch in n and m, or the vertical
stroke in q,p,d,b). Yet, data from a broad comparative survey of letter shapes in 43
writing systems shows writing to be much less combinatorial than speech. Combinatoriality,
thus, is not the only way for a communication system to create numerous, distinctive
symbols. These two studies illustrate an approach of the evolution of communication
systems where the need for communicative efficiency is acknowledged but not taken as a
sufficient explanation. Languages and other communication systems evolved under a pressure
for efficiency, but they do not always comply with it, or they may comply in unpredictable
ways.
*Anyone not affiliated with CEU wishing to attend in-person in Vienna must RSVP to get
access to the lecture hall.
Best regards,
Fanni
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FANNI TAKÁTSY
Lab Manager/Research Coordinator,
Social Mind Center
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[cid:42067b17-4991-4d34-9c89-2f5005166125]
CENTRAL EUROPEAN UNIVERSITY
Quellenstrasse 51. | 1100 Vienna, Austria
takatsyf@ceu.edu<mailto:jeneia@ceu.edu>
http://socialmind.ceu.edu/
http://cognitivescience.ceu.edu/
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