Limor Raviv and Cedric Boeckx: Introduction
Part I. Human data
1: Monica Tamariz and Aliki Papa: Iterated learning experiments
2: Shira Tal, Inbal Arnon, and Jennifer Culbertson: Artificial language learning
3: Thomas Franz Mueller and Limor Raviv: Communication experiments: Social interaction in the formation of novel communication systems
4: Jonas Noelle and David Peeters: Virtual reality as a tool to study language evolution
5: Vera Kempe and Marisa Casillas: Studying child-directed speech
6: Stefan Hartmann and Michael Pleyer: Corpus-based approaches to evolutionary dynamics in language
7: Caleb Everett: Adaptation
8: Wendy Sandler, Svetlana Dachkovsky, and Rose Stamp: The evolution of the grammar of the body in sign languages
9: Danielle Naegeli and Marieke Schouwstra: Silent gesture: Gesture studies with hearing participants
10: Anita Slonimska and Asli OEzyuerek: Methods to study evolution of iconicity in sign languages
11: Damian Blasi, Felicia Bisnath, and Pui Yiu Szeto: The study of Creole languages
12: Juan Moriano, Cedrix Boeckx, and Martin Kuhlwilm: Paleogenomics: A window into the genetic basis of derived traits in Homo sapiens
13: Yakov Pichkar and Nicole Creanza: Joint analysis of human linguistic and genomic variation
14: Maxime Derex and Charlotte Brand: Studying long-term evolutionary processes over short time scales: Methods in cumulative cultural evolution
15: Isobel Wisher and Kristian Tylen: An integrative approach to early symbolic evolution: Experimenting with the past
Part II. Simulations
16: Vanessa Ferdinand: The Bayesian iterated learning model
17: Xenia Ohmer and Christine Cuskley: Communication games: Modelling language evolution through dyadic agent interactions
18: Katie Mudd and Bart de Boer: Computational methods for language variation and convergence
19: Mathieu Rita, Paul Michel, Rahma Chaabouni, Olivier Pietquin, Emmanuel Dupoux, and Florian Strub: Language evolution with deep learning
20: Nicolas Cambier and Roman Miletitch: Task-driven language evolution with swarm robotics
21: Chundra Cathcart and Balthasar Bickel: Linguistic evolution in time and space: Addressing the methodological challenges
22: Francis Mollica and Noga Zaslavsky: Information-theoretic and machine-learning methods for semantic categorization
23: Kateryna Krykoniuk and Sean G. Roberts: Causal graphs as a tool for exploring language evolution
Part III. Animal data
24: Marco Gamba and Chiara De Gregorio: Observational work
25: Erica A. Cartmill, Emilie Genty, Kirsty E. Graham, Charlotte Grund, and Catherine Hobaiter: Re-imagining great ape gesture (coding)
26: Simone Pika and Ray Wilkinson: Evolutionary roots of human cooperative communication: Using the CA-assisted comparative approach for quantitative and qualitative analyses
27: Marlen Froehlich and Carel P. van Schaik: From species- to individual-level comparisons: What variation in great ape communication can tell us about language evolution
28: Melissa Berthet, Mael Leroux, Simon W. Townsend, and Stuart K. Watson: ethods of examining the processing and production of rule-based sequences in animals
29: Daria Valente and Andrea Ravignani: Bioacoustics and rhythm
30: Ronald J. Planer, Elisa Bandini, and Claudio Tennie: Hominin tool evolution and its (surprising) relation to language origins
31: Nicole Eichert and Rogier B. Mars: Comparative neuroimaging to study the neural infrastructure for language
32: Toshitaka N. Suzuki: How to study animal syntax