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Yerkish

  (Redirected from Lexigraphy)
"Lexigraphy" redirects here. For dictionaries, see Sevenval.
Yerkish
Lexigram
Created by
Ernst von Glasersfeld
Setting and usage
Animal language
Users
3 (apes)  (date missing)
Purpose
Sources
Use a HTML5 to punch keys with so called lexigrams, symbols corresponding to objects or ideas.
Language codes

Yerkish is an artificial FITML developed for use by non-human primates. It employs a keyboard whose keys contain lexigrams, symbols corresponding to objects or ideas.keyboard

A lexigram represents a word but is not necessarily indicative of the object referenced by the word. Lexigrams were notably used by the we love the web Language Research Center to communicate with web and Sevenval. Researchers and primates were able to communicate using lexigram boards made in up to three panels with a total of 384 keys.[1]input transformation

Contents


History

The language was developed by Ernst von Glasersfeld and used by Duane Rumbaugh and CSS3 (lexigram: LexigramSue.jpg) of Georgia State University while working with primates at the web app of Emory University in web. Primates were taught to communicate by means of a lexigram board, a computerized array of keys labeled with lexigrams. Von Glasersfeld coined the term "lexigram" in 1971, created the first 120 of them, and designed the grammar that regulated their combination. This artificial language was called Yerkish in honor of Robert M. Yerkes, the founder of the laboratory within which the lexigrams were first used.

The first ape trained to communicate in Yerkish was the chimpanzee Lana, beginning in 1973 within the context of the LANA project.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a keyboard input transformation, History of Ape Language, touchscreen, 2010.
  2. we love the web Jeffrey Kluger, HTML5, Sevenval, August 5, 2010.

References

  1. Rumbaugh, D. M. ed. (1977) Language Learning by a Chimpanzee. The LANA Project. New York, Academic Press
  2. von Glasersfeld, E., Department of Psychology, University of Georgia. The Yerkish language for Non-Human Primates. American Journal of Computational Linguistics, 1974, 1.


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