Open Research will be unavailable from 8am to 8.30am on Monday 21st July 2025 due to scheduled maintenance. This maintenance is to provide bug fixes and performance improvements. During this time, you may experience a short outage and be unable to use Open Research.
 

New problems for defining animal communication in informational terms

Date

Authors

Kalkman, David

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer International Publishing AG

Abstract

Exactly what makes an interaction between two organisms a case of communication is contentious. Historically, debate has taken place between definitions of communication invoking information transmission vs definitions invoking causal influence. More recently, there has been some convergence on a hybrid definition: invoking (co-adapted) causal influence mediated via the transmission of information. After proposing an understanding of what it means to say that a receiver is causally influenced by the transmission of information, I argue that an information-mediated influence definition overextends to include most, indeed maybe all, co-adapted interactions. This is because the transmission of correlational information is actually a feature of most, if not all, co-adapted interactions. I end by considering whether adding an arbitrariness criterion to an information-mediated influence definition helps. After giving an account of what arbitrariness amounts to, I argue that it swings things too far in the opposite direction: we go from a definition of communication that is too liberal to one that is too restrictive. This is because many signal kinds are not arbitrary. It turns out to be extremely difficult to capture what makes communication unique

Description

Citation

Source

Synthese

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2099-12-31