Discovering and maintaining behaviours inaccessible to incremental genetic evolution through transcription errors and cultural transmission

James Borg*, Alastair Channon, Charles Day

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Chapter in Book/Published conference outputConference publication

Abstract

In this work the question of whether the introduction of both transcription errors and cultural transmission, in the form of learning by imitation, can enable the evolution of behaviours inaccessible to incremental genetic evolution alone is assessed. To answer this a neural network model using a hybrid of two different networks was implemented: one capable of demonstrating reactive qualities, the other controlling deliberative goal selecting behaviours. Animats using this model were evolved in an adaptation of the environment proposed by Robinson et al. (2007) to solve increasingly difficult tasks. Simulations were run on populations with and without learning by imitation to assess the relative success of each strategy, leading to the conclusion that populations with learning by imitation can successfully demonstrate the most complex behaviour, which was empirically found to be inaccessible to non-learning populations.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationProceedings of the European Conference on Artificial Life 2011
PublisherMIT Press Journals
Pages101-108
Publication statusPublished - 2011
EventThe 11th European Conference on Artificial Life - Paris, France
Duration: 8 Aug 201112 Aug 2011
https://www.ecal11.org/

Conference

ConferenceThe 11th European Conference on Artificial Life
Abbreviated titleECAL2011
Country/TerritoryFrance
CityParis
Period8/08/1112/08/11
Internet address

Keywords

  • Cultural Transmission
  • Incremental Genetic Evolution
  • Neuroevolution

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