Emergence of hierarchical reference systems in multi-agent communication
In natural language, referencing objects at different levels of specificity is a fundamental pragmatic mechanism for efficient communication in context. We develop a novel communication game, the hierarchical reference game, to study the emergence of such reference systems in artificial agents. We c...
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Main Authors | , , |
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Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
24.03.2022
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | In natural language, referencing objects at different levels of specificity
is a fundamental pragmatic mechanism for efficient communication in context. We
develop a novel communication game, the hierarchical reference game, to study
the emergence of such reference systems in artificial agents. We consider a
simplified world, in which concepts are abstractions over a set of primitive
attributes (e.g., color, style, shape). Depending on how many attributes are
combined, concepts are more general ("circle") or more specific ("red dotted
circle"). Based on the context, the agents have to communicate at different
levels of this hierarchy. Our results show that the agents learn to play the
game successfully and can even generalize to novel concepts. To achieve
abstraction, they use implicit (omitting irrelevant information) and explicit
(indicating that attributes are irrelevant) strategies. In addition, the
compositional structure underlying the concept hierarchy is reflected in the
emergent protocols, indicating that the need to develop hierarchical reference
systems supports the emergence of compositionality. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2203.13176 |