Cyberlanguage: Native Communication for the Cyber-Physical-Social-Thinking Fusion Space
Huansheng Ning, Jianguo Ding

TL;DR
Cyberlanguage is a new communication framework designed for the integrated cyber-physical-social-thinking space, enabling heterogeneous agents to coordinate effectively in a fused digital and physical environment.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretically grounded, four-dimensional native language framework with a semiotic model and implementation roadmap for the CPST fusion space.
Findings
Proposes a semiotic model based on Cybersign units and four-dimensional grammar.
Defines a five-layer architectural stack for cyberlanguage.
Provides testable empirical predictions and implementation stages.
Abstract
Human communication is undergoing a fundamental paradigm shift. Physical space, social relations, mental states, and digital information are converging into a unified cyber-physical-social-thinking (CPST) fusion space, rendering them no longer separable domains. However, all existing communication systems, including natural and programming languages, as well as interaction protocols, were designed for a world in which these four dimensions remained distinct. We introduce Cyberlanguage, a theoretically grounded communicative framework that is native to the CPST fusion space. Grounded in the philosophical orientation of cyberism and employing CPST theory as an analytical framework, Cyberlanguage possesses four core characteristics: native four-dimensional fusion, multi-agent universality, dynamic compilability, and contextual adaptability. We have constructed a semiotic model based on the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
