Biolinguistics can be defined as the study of biology and the evolution of language. It is highly interdisciplinary as it is related to various fields such as biology, linguistics, psychology, anthropology, mathematics, and neurolinguistics to explain the formation of language. It seeks to yield a framework by which we can understand the fundamentals of the faculty of language. This field was first introduced by Massimo Piattelli-Palmarini, professor of Linguistics and Cognitive Science at the University of Arizona. It was first introduced in 1971, at an international meeting at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
Biolinguistics, also called the biolinguistic enterprise or the biolinguistic approach, is believed to have its origins in Noam Chomsky's and Eric Lenneberg's work on language acquisition that began in the 1950s as a reaction to the then-dominant behaviorist paradigm. Fundamentally, biolinguistics challenges the view of human language acquisition as a behavior based on stimulus-response interactions and associations. Chomsky and Lenneberg militated against it by arguing for the innate knowledge of language. Chomsky in 1960s proposed the Language Acquisition Device (LAD) as a hypothetical tool for language acquisition that only humans are born with. Similarly, Lenneberg (1967) formulated the Critical Period Hypothesis, the main idea of which being that language acquisition is biologically constrained. These works were regarded as pioneers in the shaping of biolinguistic thought, in what was the beginning of a change in paradigm in the study of language.
Origins of biolinguistics
The investigation of the biological foundations of language is associated with two historical periods, namely that of the 19th century (primarily via Darwinian evolutionary theory) and the 20th century (primarily via the integration of the mathematical linguistics (in the form of Chomskyan generative grammar) with neuroscience.
19th century: Darwin's theory of evolution
Darwinism inspired many researchers to study language, in particular the evolution of language, via the lens of biology. Darwin's theory regarding the origin of language attempts to answer three important questions:
- Did individuals undergo something like selection as they evolved?
- Did selection play a role in producing the capacity for language in humans?
- If selection did play a role, was selection primarily responsible for the emergence of language, was it just one of the several contributing causes?
Dating back to 1821, German linguist August Schleicher was the representative pioneer of biolinguistics, discussing the evolution of language based on Darwin's theory of evolution. Since linguistics had been believed to be a form of historical science under the influence of the Société de Linguistique de Paris, speculations of the origin of language were not permitted. As a result, hardly did any prominent linguist write about the origin of language apart from German linguist Hugo Schuchardt. Darwinism addressed the arguments of other researchers and scholars much as Max Müller by arguing that language use, while requiring a certain mental capacity, also stimulates brain development, enabling long trains of thought and strengthening power. Darwin drew an extended analogy between the evolution of languages and species, noting in each domain the presence of rudiments, of crossing and blending, and variation, and remarking on how each development gradually through a process of struggle.
20th century: Biological foundation of language
The first phase in the development of biolinguistics runs through the late 1960s with the publication of Lennberg's Biological Foundation of Language (1967). During the first phase, work focused on:
- specifying the boundary conditions for human language as a system of cognition;
- language development as it presents itself in the acquisition sequence that children go through when they learn a language
- genetics of language disorders that create specific language disabilities, including dyslexia and deafness)
- language evolution.
During this period, the greatest progress was made in coming to a better understanding of the defining properties of human language as a system of cognition. Three landmark events shaped the modern field of biolinguistics: two important conferences were convened in the 1970s, and a retrospective article was published in 1997 by Lyle Jenkins.
- 1974: The first official biolinguistic conference was organized by him in 1974, bringing together evolutionary biologists, neuroscientists, linguists, and others interested in the development of language in the individual, its origins and evolution.
- 1976: another conference was held by the New York Academy of Science, after which numerous works on the origin of language were published.
- 1997: For the 40th anniversary of transformational-generative grammar, Lyle Jenkins wrote an article titled "Biolinguistics: Structure development and evolution of language".
The second phase began in the late 1970s . In 1976 Chomsky formulated the fundamental questions of biolinguistics as follows: i) function, ii) structure, iii) physical basis, iv) development in the individual, v) evolutionary development. In the late 1980s a great deal of progress was made in answering questions about the development of language. This then prompted further questions about language design, function, and, the evolution of language. The following year, Juan Uriagereka, a graduate student of Howard Lasnik, wrote the introductory text to Minimalist Syntax, Rhyme and Reason. Their work renewed interest in biolinguistics, catalysing many linguists to look into biolinguistics with their colleagues in adjacent scientific disciplines. Both Jenkins and Uriagereka stressed the importance of addressing the emergence of the language faculty in humans. At around the same time, geneticists discovered a link between the language deficit manifest by the KE family members and the gene FOXP2. Although FOXP2 is not the gene responsible for language, this discovery brought many linguists and scientists together to interpret this data, renewing the interest of biolinguistics.
Although many linguists have differing opinions when it comes to the history of biolinguistics, Chomsky believes that its history was simply that of transformational grammar. While Professor Anna Maria Di Sciullo claims that the interdisciplinary research of biology and linguistics in the 1950s-1960s led to the rise of biolinguistics. Furthermore, Jenkins believes that biolinguistics was the outcome of transformational grammarians studying human linguistic and biological mechanisms. On the other hand, linguists Martin Nowak and Charles Yang argue that biolinguistics, originating in the 1970s, is distinct transformational grammar; rather a new branch of the linguistics-biology research paradigm initiated by transformational grammar.
Developments
Chomsky's Theories
Universal Grammar and Generative Grammar
In Aspects of the theory of Syntax, Chomsky proposed that languages are the product of a biologically determined capacity present in all humans, located in the brain. He addresses three core questions of biolinguistics: what constitutes the knowledge of language, how is knowledge acquired, how is the knowledge put to use? A great deal of ours must be innate, supporting his claim with the fact that speakers are capable of producing and understanding novel sentences without explicit instructions. Chomsky proposed that the form of the grammar may emerge from the mental structure afforded by the human brain and argued that formal grammatical categories such as nouns, verbs, and adjectives do not exist. The linguistic theory of generative grammar thereby proposes that sentences are generated by a subconscious set of procedures which are part of an individual's cognitive ability. These procedures are modeled through a set of formal grammatical rules which are thought to generate sentences in a language.
Chomsky focuses on the mind of the language learner or user and proposed that internal properties of the language faculty are closely linked to the physical biology of humans. He further introduced the idea of a Universal Grammar (UG) theorized to be inherent to all human beings. From the view of Biolinguistic approach, the process of language acquisition would be fast and smooth because humans naturally obtain the fundamental perceptions toward Universal Grammar, which is opposite to the usage-based approach. UG refers to the initial state of the faculty of language; a biologically innate organ that helps the learner make sense of the data and build up an internal grammar. The theory suggests that all human languages are subject to universal principles or parameters that allow for different choices (values). It also contends that humans possess generative grammar, which is hard-wired into the human brain in some ways and makes it possible for young children to do the rapid and universal acquisition of speech. Elements of linguistic variation then determine the growth of language in the individual, and variation is the result of experience, given the genetic endowment and independent principles reducing complexity. Chomsky's work is often recognized as the weak perspective of biolinguistics as it does not pull from other fields of study outside of linguistics.
Modularity Hypothesis
According to Chomsky, the human's brains consist of various sections which possess their individual functions, such as the language faculty, visual recognition.
Language Acquisition Device
The acquisition of language is a universal feat and it is believed we are all born with an innate structure initially proposed by Chomsky in the 1960s. The Language Acquisition Device (LAD) was presented as an innate structure in humans which enabled language learning. Individuals are thought to be "wired" with universal grammar rules enabling them to understand and evaluate complex syntactic structures. Proponents of the LAD often quote the argument of the poverty of negative stimulus, suggesting that children rely on the LAD to develop their knowledge of a language despite not being exposed to a rich linguistic environment. Later, Chomsky exchanged this notion instead for that of Universal Grammar, providing evidence for a biological basis of language.
Minimalist Program
The Minimalist Program (MP) was introduced by Chomsky in 1993, and it focuses on the parallel between language and the design of natural concepts. Those invested in the Minimalist Program are interested in the physics and mathematics of language and its parallels with our natural world. For example, Piatelli-Palmarini studied the isomorphic relationship between the Minimalist Program and Quantum Field Theory. The Minimalist Program aims to figure out how much of the Principles and Parameters model can be taken as a result of the hypothetical optimal and computationally efficient design of the human language faculty and more developed versions of the Principles and Parameters approach in turn provide technical principles from which the minimalist program can be seen to follow. The program further aims to develop ideas involving the and , which had started to become an independent theory in the early 1990s, but were then still considered as peripherals of transformational grammar.
Merge
The Merge operation is used by Chomsky to explain the structure of syntax trees within the Minimalist program. Merge itself is a process which provides the basis of phrasal formation as a result of taking two elements within a phrase and combining them In A.M. Di Sciullo & D. Isac's The Asymmetry of Merge (2008), they highlight the two key bases of Merge by Chomsky;
- Merge is binary
- Merge is recursive
In order to understand this, take the following sentence: Emma dislikes the pie
This phrase can be broken down into its lexical items:
[VP [DP Emma] [V' [V dislikes] [DP [D the] [NP pie]]]]
The above phrasal representation allows for an understanding of each lexical item. In order to build a tree using Merge, using bottom-up formation the two final elements of the phrase are selected and then combined to form a new element on the tree. In image a) you can see that the determiner the and the Noun Phrase pie are both selected. Through the process of Merge, the new formed element on the tree is the determiner Phrase (DP) which holds, the pie, which is visible in b).
- a) Selection of the final two element of the phrase
- b) The two selected elements are then "merged" and they produce one new constituent, known as the Determiner Phrase (DP)
- c) Selection of DP the pie with V dislikes
- d) Merge operation has occurred, yielded new element on tree, V' (V-bar)
- e) Selection of V' dislikes the pie and DP subject Emma
- f) Merge operation has undergone, yielded new element on tree; VP
Core components
In a minimalist approach, there are three core components of the language faculty proposed: Sensory-Motor system (SM), Conceptual-Intentional system (CI), and Narrow Syntax (NS). SM includes biological requisites for language production and perception, such as articulatory organs, and CI meets the biological requirements related to inference, interpretation, and reasoning, those involved in other cognitive functions. As SM and CI are finite, the main function of NS is to make it possible to produce infinite numbers of sound-meaning pairs.
Relevance of Natural Law
It is possible that the core principles of The Faculty of Language be correlated to natural laws (such as for example, the Fibonacci sequence— an array of numbers where each consecutive number is a sum of the two that precede it, see for example the discussion Uriagereka 1997 and Carnie and Medeiros 2005). According to the hypothesis being developed, the essential properties of language arise from nature itself: the efficient growth requirement appears everywhere, from the pattern of petals in flowers, leaf arrangements in trees and the spirals of a seashell to the structure of DNA and proportions of human head and body. Natural Law in this case would provide insight on concepts such as binary branching in syntactic trees and well as the Merge operation. This would translate to thinking it in terms of taking two elements on a syntax tree and such that their sum yields another element that falls below on the given syntax tree (Refer to trees above in Minimalist Program). By adhering to this sum of two elements that precede it, provides support for binary structures. Furthermore, the possibility of ternary branching would deviate from the Fibonacci sequence and consequently would not hold as strong support to the relevance of Natural Law in syntax.
Biolinguistics: Challenging the Usage-Based Approach
As mentioned above, biolinguistics challenges the idea that the acquisition of language is a result of behavior based learning. This alternative approach the biolinguistics challenges is known as the usage-based (UB) approach. UB supports that idea that knowledge of human language is acquired via exposure and usage. One of the primary issues that is highlighted when arguing against the Usage-Based approach, is that UB fails to address the issue of poverty of stimulus, whereas biolinguistics addresses this by way of the Language Acquisition Device.
Lenneberg and the Role of Genes
Another major contributor to the field is Eric Lenneberg. In is book Biological Foundation of Languages, Lenneberg (1967) suggests that different aspects of human biology that putatively contribute to language more than genes at play. This integration of other fields to explain language is recognized as the strong view in biolinguistics While they are obviously essential, and while genomes are associated with specific organisms, genes do not store traits (or "faculties") in the way that linguists—including Chomskyans—sometimes seem to imply.
Contrary to the concept of the existence of a language faculty as suggested by Chomsky, Lenneberg argues that while there are specific regions and networks crucially involved in the production of language, there is no single region to which language capacity is confined and that speech, as well as language, is not confined to the cerebral cortex. Lenneberg considered language as a species-specific mental organ with significant biological properties. He suggested that this organ grows in the mind/brain of a child in the same way that other biological organs grow, showing that the child's path to language displays the hallmark of biological growth. According to Lenneberg, genetic mechanisms plays an important role in the development of an individual's behavior and is characterized by two aspects:
- The acknowledgement of an indirect relationship between genes and traits, and;
- The rejection of the existence of 'special' genes for language, that is, the rejection of the need for a specifically linguistic genotype;
Based on this, Lenneberg goes on further to claim that no kind of functional principle could be stored in an individual's genes, rejecting the idea that there exist genes for specific traits, including language. In other words, that genes can contain traits. He then proposed that the way in which genes influence the general patterns of structure and function is by means of their action upon ontogenesis of genes as a causal agent which is individually the direct and unique responsible for a specific phenotype, criticizing prior hypothesis by Charles Goodwin.
Recent Developments
Generative Procedure Accepted At Present & Its Developments
In biolinguistics, language is recognised to be based on recursive generative procedure that retrieves words from the lexicon and applies them repeatedly to output phrases. This generative procedure was hypothesised to be a result of a minor brain mutation due to evidence that word ordering is limited to externalisation and plays no role in core syntax or semantics. Thus, different lines of inquiry to explain this were explored.
The most commonly accepted line of inquiry to explain this is Noam Chomsky's minimalist approach to syntactic representations. In 2016, Chomsky and Berwick defined the minimalist program under the Strong Minimalist Thesis in their book Why Only Us by saying that language is mandated by efficient computations and, thus, keeps to the simplest recursive operations. The main basic operation in the minimalist program is merge. Under merge there are two ways in which larger expressions can be constructed: externally and internally. Lexical items that are merged externally build argument representations with disjoint constituents. The internal merge creates constituent structures where one is a part of another. This induces displacement, the capacity to pronounce phrases in one position, but interpret them elsewhere.
Recent investigations of displacement concur to a slight rewiring in cortical brain regions that could have occurred historically and perpetuated generative grammar. Upkeeping this line of thought, in 2009, Ramus and Fishers speculated that a single gene could create a signalling molecule to facilitate new brain connections or a new area of the brain altogether via prenatally defined brain regions. This would result in information processing greatly important to language, as we know it. The spread of this advantage trait could be responsible for secondary externalisation and the interaction we engage in. If this holds, then the objective of biolinguistics is to find out as much as we can about the principles underlying mental recursion.
Human versus Animal Communication
Compared to other topics in linguistics where data can be displayed with evidence cross-linguistically, due to the nature of biolinguistics, and that it is applies to the entirety of linguistics rather than just a specific subsection, examining other species can assist in providing data. Although animals do not have the same linguistic competencies as humans, it is assumed that they can provide evidence for some linguistic competence.
The relatively new science of evo-devo that suggests everyone is a common descendant from a single tree has opened pathways into gene and biochemical study. One way in which this manifested within biolinguistics is through the suggestion of a common language gene, namely FOXP2. Though this gene is subject to debate, there have been interesting recent discoveries made concerning it and the part it plays in the secondary externalization process. Recent studies of birds and mice resulted in an emerging consensus that FOXP2 is not a blueprint for internal syntax nor the narrow faculty of language, but rather makes up the regulatory machinery pertaining to the process of externalization. It has been found to assist sequencing sound or gesture one after the next, hence implying that FOXP2 helps transfer knowledge from declarative to procedural memory. Therefore, FOXP2 has been discovered to be an aid in formulating a linguistic input-output system that runs smoothly.
The Integration Hypothesis
According to the Integration Hypothesis, human language is the combination of the Expressive (E) component and the Lexical (L) component. At the level of words, the L component contains the concept and meaning that we want to convey. The E component contains grammatical information and inflection. For phrases, we often see an alternation between the two components. In sentences, the E component is responsible for providing the shape and structure to the base-level lexical words, while these lexical items and their corresponding meanings found in the lexicon make up the L component. This has consequences for our understanding of: (i) the origins of the E and L components found in bird and monkey communication systems; (ii) the rapid emergence of human language as related to words; (iii) evidence of hierarchical structure within compound words; (iv) the role of phrases in the detection of the structure building operation Merge; and (v) the application of E and L components to sentences. In this way, we see that the Integration Hypothesis can be applied to all levels of language: the word, phrasal, and sentence level.
The Origins of the E and L systems in Bird and Monkey Communication Systems
Through the application of the Integration Hypothesis, it can be seen that the interaction between the E and L components enables language structure (E component) and lexical items (L component) to operate simultaneously within one form of complex communication: human language. However, these two components are thought to have emerged from two pre-existing, separate, communication systems in the animal world. The communication systems of birds and monkeys have been found to be antecedents to human language. The bird song communication system is made up entirely of the E component while the alarm call system used by monkeys is made up of the L component. Human language is thought to be the byproduct of these two separate systems found in birds and monkeys, due to parallels between human communication and these two animal communication systems.
The communication systems of songbirds is commonly described as a system that is based on syntactic operations. Specifically, bird song enables the systematic combination of sound elements in order to string together a song. Likewise, human languages also operate syntactically through the combination of words, which are calculated systematically. While the mechanics of bird song thrives off of syntax, it appears as though the notes, syllables, and motifs that are combined in order to elicit the different songs may not necessarily contain any meaning. The communication system of songbirds' also lacks a lexicon that contains a set of any sort of meaning-to-referent pairs. Essentially, this means that an individual sound produced by a songbird does not have meaning associated with it, the way a word does in human language. Bird song is capable of being structured, but it is not capable of carrying meaning. In this way, the prominence of syntax and the absence of lexical meaning presents bird song as a strong candidate for being a simplified antecedent of the E component that is found in human language, as this component also lacks lexical information. While birds that use bird song can rely on just this E component to communicate, human utterances require lexical meaning in addition to structural operations a part of the E component, as human language is unable to operate with just syntactic structure or structural function words alone. This is evident as human communication does in fact consist of a lexicon, and humans produce combined sequences of words that are meaningful, best known as sentences. This suggests that part of human language must have been adapted from another animal's communication system in order for the L component to arise .
A well known study by Seyfarth et al. investigated the referential nature of the alarm calls of vervet monkeys. These monkeys have three set alarm calls, with each call directly mapping on to one of the following referents: a leopard, an eagle, or a snake. Each call is used to warn other monkeys about the presence of one of these three predators in their immediate environmental surroundings. The main idea is that the alarm call contains lexical information that can be used to represent the referent that is being referred to. Essentially, the entire communication system used by monkeys is made up of the L system such that only these lexical-based calls are needed to effectively communicate. This is similar to the L component found in human language in which content words are used to refer to a referent in the real world, containing the relevant lexical information. The L component in human language is, however, a much more complex variant of the L component found in vervet monkey communication systems: humans use many more than just 3 word-forms to communicate. While vervet monkeys are capable of communicating solely with the L component, humans are not, as communication with just content words does not output well-formed grammatical sentences. It is for this reason that the L component is combined with the E component responsible for syntactic structure in order to output human language.
The Rapid Emergence of Human Language
As traces of the E and L components have been found in nature, the integration hypothesis asserts that these two systems existed before human language, and that it was the combination of these two pre-existing systems that rapidly led to the emergence of human language. The Integration Hypothesis posits that it was the grammatical operator, Merge, that triggered the combination of the E and L systems to create human language. In this view, language emerged rapidly and fully formed, already containing syntactical structure. This is in contrast to the Gradualist Approach, where it is thought that early forms of language did not have syntax. Instead, supporters of the Gradualist Approach believe language slowly progressed through a series of stages as a result of a simple combinatory operator that generated flat structures. Beginning with a one-word stage, then a two-word stage, then a three-word stage, etc., language is thought to have developed hierarchy in later stages.
In the article, The precedence of syntax in the rapid emergence of human language in evolution as defined by the integration hypothesis, Nóbrega & Miyagawa outline the Integration Hypothesis as it applies to words. To explain the Integration Hypothesis as it relates to words, everyone must first agree on the definition of a 'word'. While this seems fairly straightforward in English, this is not the case for other languages. To allow for cross-linguistic discussion, the idea of a "root" is used instead, where a "root" encapsulates a concept at the most basic level. In order to differentiate between "roots" and "words", it must be noted that "roots" are completely devoid of any information relating to grammatical category or inflection. Therefore, "roots" form the lexical component of the Integration Hypothesis while grammatical category (noun, verb, adjective) and inflectional properties (e.g. case, number, tense, etc.) form the expressive component.
Thus, at the most basic level for the formation of a "word" in human language, there must be a combination of the L component with the E component. When we know a "word" in a language, we must know both components: the concept that it relates to as well as its grammatical category and inflection. The former is the L component; the latter is the E component. The Integration Hypothesis suggests that it was the grammatical operator Merge that triggered this combination, occurring when one linguistic object (L layer) satisfies the grammatical feature of another linguistic object (E layer). This means that L components are not expected to directly combine with each other.
Based on this analysis, it is believed that human language emerged in a single step. Before this rapid emergence, the L component, "roots", existed individually, lacked grammatical features, and were not combined with each other. However, once this was combined with the E component, it led to the emergence of human language, with all the necessary characteristics. Hierarchical structures of syntax are already present within words because of the integration of these two layers. This pattern is continued when words are combined with each other to make phrases, as well as when phrases are combined into sentences. Therefore, the Integration Hypothesis posits that once these two systems were integrated, human language appeared fully formed, and did not require additional stages.
Evidence of Hierarchical Structure Within Compound Words
Compound words are a special point of interest with the Integration Hypothesis, as they are further evidence that words contain internal structure. The Integration Hypothesis, analyzes compound words differently compared to previous gradualist theories of language development. As previously mentioned, in the Gradualist Approach, compound words are thought of as part of a proto-syntax stage to the human language. In this proposal of a lexical protolanguage, compounds are developed in the second stage through a combination of single words by a rudimentary recursive n-ary operation that generates flat structures. However, the Integration Hypothesis challenges this belief, claiming that there is evidence to suggest that words are internally complex. In English for example, the word 'unlockable' is ambiguous because of two possible structures within. It can either mean something that is able to be unlocked (unlock-able), or it can mean something that is not lockable (un-lockable). This ambiguity points to two possible hierarchical structures within the word: it cannot have the flat structure posited by the Gradualist Approach. With this evidence, supporters of the Integration Hypothesis argue that these hierarchical structures in words are formed by Merge, where the L component and E component are combined. Thus, Merge is responsible for the formation of compound words and phrases. This discovery leads to the hypothesis that words, compounds, and all linguistic objects of the human language are derived from this integration system, and provides contradictory evidence to the theory of an existence of a protolanguage.
In the view of compounds as "living fossils", Jackendoff alleges that the basic structure of compounds does not provide enough information to offer semantic interpretation. Hence, the semantic interpretation must come from pragmatics. However, Nórega and Miyagawa noticed that this claim of dependency on pragmatics is not a property of compound words that is demonstrated in all languages. The example provided by Nórega and Miyagawa is the comparison between English (a Germanic language) and Brazilian Portuguese (a Romance language). English compound nouns can offer a variety of semantic interpretations. For example, the compound noun "car man" can have several possible understandings such as: a man who sells cars, a man who's passionate about cars, a man who repairs cars, a man who drives cars, etc. In comparison, the Brazilian Portuguese compound noun "peixe-espada" translated as "sword fish", only has one understanding of a fish that resembles a sword. Consequently, when looking at the semantic interpretations available of compound words between Germanic languages and Romance languages, the Romance languages have highly restrictive meanings. This finding presents evidence that in fact, compounds contain more sophisticated internal structures than previously thought. Moreover, Nórega and Miyagawa provide further evidence to counteract the claim of a protolanguage through examining exocentric VN compounds. As defined, one of the key components to Merge is the property of being recursive. Therefore, by observing recursion within exocentric VN compounds of Romance languages, this proves that there must be an existence of an internal hierarchical structure which Merge is responsible for combining. In the data collected by Nórega and Miyagawa, they observe recursion occurring in several occasions within different languages. This happens in Catalan, Italian, and Brazilian Portuguese where a new VN compound is created when a nominal exocentric VN compound is the complement of a verb. For example, referring to the Catalan translation of "windshield wipers", [neteja[para-brises]] lit. clean-stop-breeze, we can identify recursion because [para-brises] is the complement of [neteja]. Additionally, we can also note the occurrence of recursion when the noun of a VN compound contains a list of complements. For example, referring to the Italian translation of "rings, earrings, or small jewels holder", [porta[anelli, orecchini o piccoli monili]] lit. carry-rings-earrings-or-small-jewels, there is recursion because of the string of complements [anelli, orecchini o piccoli monili] containing the noun to the verb [porta].
The common claim that compounds are fossils of language often complements the argument that they contain a flat, linear structure. However, Di Sciullo provided experimental evidence to dispute this. With the knowledge that there is asymmetry in the internal structure of exocentric compounds, she uses the experimental results to show that hierarchical complexity effects are observed from processing of NV compounds in English. In her experiment, sentences containing object-verb compounds and sentences containing adjunct-verb compounds were presented to English speakers, who then assessed the acceptability of these sentences. Di Sciullo has noted that previous works have determined adjunct-verb compounds to have more complex structure than object-verb compounds because adjunct-verb compounds require merge to occur several times. In her experiment, there were 10 English speaking participants who evaluated 60 English sentences. The results revealed that the adjunct-verb compounds had a lower acceptability rate and the object-verb compounds had a higher acceptability rate. In other words, the sentences containing the adjunct-verb compounds were viewed as more "ill-formed" than the sentences containing the object-verb compounds. The findings demonstrated that the human brain is sensitive to the internal structures that these compounds contain. Since adjunct-verb compounds contain complex hierarchical structures from the recursive application of Merge, these words are more difficult to decipher and analyze than the object-verb compounds which encompass simpler hierarchical structures. This is evidence that compounds could not have been fossils of a protolanguage without syntax due to their complex internal hierarchical structures.
Interactions Between E and L Components in Phrases of Human Language
As previously mentioned, human language is interesting because it necessarily requires elements from both E and L systems - neither can stand alone. Lexical items, or what the Integration Hypothesis refers to as 'roots', are necessary as they refer to things in the world around us. Expression items, that convey information about category or inflection (number, tense, case etc.) are also required to shape the meanings of the roots.
It becomes more clear that neither of these two systems can exist alone with regards to human language when we look at the phenomenon of 'labeling'. This phenomenon refers to how we classify the grammatical category of phrases, where the grammatical category of the phrase is dependent on the grammatical category of one of the words within the phrase, called the head. For example, in the phrase "buy the books", the verb "buy" is the head, and we call the entire phrase a verb-phrase. There is also a smaller phrase within this verb-phrase, a determiner phrase, "the books" because of the determiner "the". What makes this phenomenon interesting is that it allows for hierarchical structure within phrases. This has implications on how we combine words to form phrases and eventually sentences.
This labelling phenomenon has limitations however. Some labels can combine and others cannot. For example, two lexical structure labels cannot directly combine. The two nouns, "Lucy" and "dress" cannot directly be combined. Likewise, neither can the noun "pencil" be merged with the adjective "short", nor can the verbs, "want" and "drink" cannot be merged without anything in between. As represented by the schematic below, all of these examples are impossible lexical structures. This shows that there is a limitation where lexical categories can only be one layer deep. However, these limitations can be overcome with the insertion of an expression layer in between. For example, to combine "John" and "book", adding a determiner such as "-'s" makes this a possible combination.
Another limitation regards the recursive nature of the expressive layer. While it is true that CP and TP can come together to form hierarchical structure, this CP TP structure cannot repeat on top of itself: it is only a single layer deep. This restriction is common to both the expressive layer in humans, but also in birdsong. This similarity strengthens the tie between the pre-existing E system posited to have originated in birdsong and the E layers found in human language.
Due to these limitations in each system, where both lexical and expressive categories can only be one layer deep, the recursive and unbounded hierarchical structure of human language is surprising. The Integration hypothesis posits that it is the combination of these two types of layers that results in such a rich hierarchical structure. The alternation between L layers and E layers is what allows human language to reach an arbitrary depth of layers. For example, in the phrase "Eat the cake that Mary baked", the tree structure shows an alternation between L and E layers. This can easily be described by two phrase rules: (i) LP → L EP and (ii) EP → E LP. The recursion that is possible is plainly seen by transforming these phrase rules into bracket notation. The LP in (i) can be written as [L EP]. Then, adding an E layer to this LP to create an EP would result in [E [L EP]]. After, a more complex LP could be obtained by adding an L layer to the EP, resulting in [L [E [L EP]]]. This can continue forever and would result in the recognizable deep structures found in human language.
The Operation of E and L Components in the Syntax of Sentences
The E and L components can be used to explain the syntactic structures that make up sentences in human languages. The first component, the L component, contains content words. This component is responsible for carrying the lexical information that relays the underlying meaning behind a sentence. However, combinations consisting solely of L component content words do not result in grammatical sentences. This issue is resolved through the interaction of the L component with the E component. The E component is made up of function words: words that are responsible for inserting syntactic information about the syntactic categories of L component words, as well as morphosyntactic information about clause-typing, question, number, case and focus. Since these added elements complement the content words in the L component, the E component can be thought of as being applied to the L component. Considering that the L component is solely composed of lexical information and the E component is solely composed of syntactic information, they do exist as two independent systems. However, for the rise of such a complex system as human language, the two systems are necessarily reliant on each other. This aligns with Chomsky's proposal of duality of semantics which suggests that human language is composed of these two distinct components. In this way, it is logical as to why the convergence of these two components was necessary in order to enable the functionality of human language as we know it today.
Looking at the following example taken from the article The integration hypothesis of human language evolution and the nature of contemporary languages by Miyagawa et al., each word can be identified as either being either an L component or an E component in the sentence: Did John eat pizza?
The L component words of this sentence are the content words John, eat, and pizza. Each word only contains lexical information that directly contributes to the meaning of the sentence. The L component is often referred to as the base or inner component, due to the inwards positioning of this constituent in a phrase structure tree. It is evident that the string of words 'John eat pizza' does not form a grammatically well-formed sentence in English, which suggests that E component words are necessary to syntactically shape and structure this string of words. The E component is typically referred to as the outer component that shapes the inner L component as these elements originate in a position that orbits around the L component in a phrase structure tree. In this example, the E component function word that is implemented is did. By inserting this word, two types of structures are added to the expression: tense and clause typing. The word did is a word that is used to inquire about something that happened in the past, meaning that it adds the structure of the past tense to this expression. In this example, this does not explicitly change the form of the verb, as the verb eat in the past tense still surfaces as eat without any additional tense markers in this particular environment. Instead the tense slot can be thought of as being filled by a null symbol (∅) as this past tense form does not have any phonological content. Although covert, this null tense marker is an important contribution from the E component word did. Tense aside, clause typing is also conveyed through the E component. It is interesting that this function word did surfaces in the sentence initial position because in English, this indicates that the string of words will manifest as a question. The word did determines that the structure of the clause type for this sentence will be in the form of an interrogative question, specifically a yes–no question. Overall, the integration of the E component with the L component forms the well-formed sentence, Did John eat pizza?, and accounts for all other utterances found in human languages.
Critiques
Alternative Theoretical Approaches
Stemming from the usage-based approach, the Competition Model, developed by Elizabeth Bates and Brian MacWhinney, views language acquisition as consisting of a series of competitive cognitive processes that act upon a linguistic signal. This suggests that language development depends on learning and detecting linguistic cues with the use of competing general cognitive mechanisms rather than innate, language-specific mechanisms.
From the side of biosemiotics, there has been a recent claim that meaning-making begins far before the emergence of human language. This meaning-making consists of internal and external cognitive processes. Thus, it holds that such process organisation could not have only given a rise to language alone. According to this perspective all living things possess these processes, regardless of how wide the variation, as a posed to species-specific.
Over-Emphasised Weak Stream Focus
When talking about biolinguistics there are two senses that are adopted to the term: strong and weak biolinguistics. The weak is founded on theoretical linguistics that is generativist in persuasion. On the other hand, the strong stream goes beyond the commonly explored theoretical linguistics, oriented towards biology, as well as other relevant fields of study. Since the early emergence of biolinguistics to its present day, there has been a focused mainly on the weak stream, seeing little difference between the inquiry into generative linguistics and the biological nature of language as well as heavily relying on the Chomskyan origin of the term.
As expressed by research professor and linguist Cedric Boeckx, it is a prevalent opinion that biolinguistics need to focus on biology as to give substance to the linguistic theorizing this field has engaged in. Particular criticisms mentioned include a lack of distinction between generative linguistics and biolinguistics, lack of discoveries pertaining to properties of grammar in the context of biology, and lack of recognition for the importance broader mechanisms, such as biological non-linguistic properties. After all, it is only an advantage to label propensity for language as biological if such insight is used towards a research.
David Poeppel, a neuroscientist and linguist, has additionally noted that if neuroscience and linguistics are done wrong, there is a risk of "inter-disciplinary cross-sterilization", arguing that there is a Granularity Mismatch Problem. Due to this different levels of representations used in linguistics and neural science lead to vague metaphors linking brain structures to linguistic components. Poeppel and Embick also introduce the Ontological Incommensurability Problem, where computational processes described in linguistic theory cannot be restored to neural computational processes.
A recent critique of biolinguistics and 'biologism' in language sciences in general has been developed by Prakash Mondal who shows that there are inconsistencies and categorical mismatches in any putative bridging constraints that purport to relate neurobiological structures and processes to the logical structures of language that have a cognitive-representational character.
Other Relevant Fields
Topic | Description | Relevance to Biolinguistics |
---|---|---|
Neurolinguistics | The study of how language is represented in the brain; closely tied to psycholinguistics, language acquisition, and the localisation of the language process. | Physiological mechanisms by which the brain processes in formation related to language. |
Language Acquisition | The way in which humans learn to perceive, produce and comprehend language; guided by Universal Grammar proposed by Chomsky; children's ability to learn properties of grammar from impoverished linguistic data. | Language growth and maturation in individuals; evolutionary processes that led to the emergence of language; poverty of the stimulus. |
Linguistic Typology | The analysis, comparison, and classification of languages according to their common structural features; | Identifies similarities and differences in the languages of the world; suggests languages may not be completely random. |
Syntax | The rules that govern the grammatical organization of words and phrases. | Generative grammar; poverty of the stimulus; structure dependency whereby a sentence is influenced its structure and not just the order of words. |
Artificial Grammar Learning | The intersection between cognitive psychology and linguistics | Humans' cognitive processes and pattern-detection in a language learning context; how humans learn and interpret grammar. |
Some Researchers in Biolinguistics (by alphabetical order of last name)
- , Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières
- Michael Arbib, University of Southern California
- Antonio-Benitez Burraco, University of Seville
- Derek Bickerton, University of Hawaii
- Cedric Boeckx, Catalan institute for Advanced Studies
- Andrew Carnie, University of Arizona
- Anna Maria Di Sciullo, University of Quebec at Montreal
- Ray C. Dougherty, New York University (NYU)
- W. Tecumseh Fitch, University of Vienna
- Dieter Hillert, San Diego State University/UC San Diego
- Philip Lieberman, Brown University
- Alec Marantz, NYU/MIT
- Massimo Piattelli-Palmarini, University of Arizona
- David Poeppel, NYU
- Charles Reiss, Concordia University
See also
- Origin of language
- Origin of speech
- Universal Grammar
- Generative Grammar
- Minimalist Program
- Merge
- Biosemiotics
- Evolutionary psychology of language
- Neurolinguistics
References
- DEMIREZEN, Mehmet (1988). "Behaviorist theory and language learning". Hacettepe üniversitesi Eğitim Fakültesi Öğretim üyesi. https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/download/article-file/88422
- Lenneberg, E.H. (1967). Biological foundations of language. New York Wiley.
- Martins, Pedro Tiago; Boeckx, Cedric (27 August 2016). "What we talk about when we talk about biolinguistics". Linguistics Vanguard. 2 (1). doi:10.1515/lingvan-2016-0007. S2CID 131936047.
- Radick, Gregory (November 2002). "Darwin on Language and Selection". Selection. 3 (1): 7–12. doi:10.1556/Select.3.2002.1.2. S2CID 36616051.
- Trabant, Jürgen (2001). New essays on the origin of language. De Gruyter. ISBN 9783110849080.
- Plotkin, Henry (25 April 1997). Darwin Machines and the Nature of Knowledge. Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674192812.
- Boeckx, Cedric; Piattelli-Palmarini, Massimo (2005). "Language as a natural object, linguistics as a natural science. Linguistic Review 22: 447–466" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-07-23. Retrieved 2014-09-15.
- "Origins and evolution of language and speech". Journal of Human Evolution. 8 (2): 309–310. February 1979. doi:10.1016/0047-2484(79)90104-0. ISSN 0047-2484.
- Jenkins, Jennifer (1997). "Biolinguistics-structure, development and evolution of language". Web Journal of Formal, Computational and Cognitive Linguistics. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.35.1374.
- Di Sciullo, Anna Maria; Boeckx, Cedric (2011). The Biolinguistic Enterprise: New Perspectives on the Evolution and Nature of the Human Language Faculty Volume 1 of Oxford Studies in Biolinguistics. Oxford University Press, 2011. ISBN 9780199553273.
- Why Only Us. The MIT Press. 2016. doi:10.7551/mitpress/10684.001.0001. ISBN 9780262333351.
- Wu, Jieqiong (15 January 2014). An Overview of Researches on Biolinguistics. Canadian Social Science. pp. 171–176. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.820.7700.
- Freidin, Robert (5 March 2012). Generative Grammar: Theory and its History (1st ed.). Routledge Leading Linguists. ISBN 9780415541336.
- Crain, Stephen; Koring, Loes; Thornton, Rosalind (2017-10-01). "Language acquisition from a biolinguistic perspective". Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews. The Biology of Language. 81 (Pt B): 120–149. doi:10.1016/j.neubiorev.2016.09.004. ISSN 0149-7634. PMID 27633153. S2CID 505901.
- Călinescu, Mihaela (1 January 2012). "Chomsky's Biolinguistic Approach to Mind and Language". Linguistic & Philosophical Investigations. 11: 91–96.
- Logan, Robert K (2007). The extended mind : the emergence of language, the human mind, and culture. Toronto : University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9780802093035.
- Pleyer, Michael; Hartmann, Stefan (2019-11-14). "Constructing a Consensus on Language Evolution? Convergences and Differences Between Biolinguistic and Usage-Based Approaches". Frontiers in Psychology. 10: 2537. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2019.02537. ISSN 1664-1078. PMC 6868443. PMID 31803099.
- "Piatelli-Palmarini, M., & Vitello, G. (2017). "Quantum field theory and the linguistic Minimalist Program: a remarkable isomorphism"". Retrieved 2019-04-10.
- Gert Webelhuth. 1995. Government and Binding Theory and the Minimalist Program: Principles and Parameters in Syntactic Theory. Wiley-Blackwell; Uriagereka, Juan. 1998. Rhyme and Reason. An Introduction to Minimalist Syntax. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press
- For a full description of the checking mechanism see Adger, David. 2003. Core Syntax. A Minimalist Approach. Oxford: Oxford University Press; and also Carnie, Andrew. 2006. Syntax: A Generative Introduction, 2nd Edition. Blackwell Publishers
- Sciullo, Anna Maria Di; Isac, Daniela (2008-09-30). "The Asymmetry of Merge". Biolinguistics. 2 (4): 260–290. doi:10.5964/bioling.8661. ISSN 1450-3417. S2CID 57556158.
- Di Sciullo, Anna Maria; et al. (Winter 2010). "The Biological Nature of Human Language". Biolinguistics. 4. S2CID 141815607.
- Soschen, Alona (2006). "Natural Law: The Dynamics of Syntactic Representations in MP" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-02-21. Retrieved 2007-02-18.
- Soschen, Alona (2008-03-25). "On the Nature of Syntax". Biolinguistics. 2 (2–3): 196–224. doi:10.5964/bioling.8641. ISSN 1450-3417. S2CID 58891675.
- Ibbotson, Paul (2013). "The Scope of Usage-Based Theory". Frontiers in Psychology. 4: 255. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00255. ISSN 1664-1078. PMC 3647106. PMID 23658552.
- Patrick, Dewey. "Evolution of Language and Mind" (PDF). Bibliotex. Retrieved February 3, 2024.
- Crain, Stephen (September 2016). "Language Acquisition from a Biolinguistic Perspective". Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews. 81. 2016Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews 81(Pt B): 120–149. doi:10.1016/j.neubiorev.2016.09.004. Retrieved February 3, 2024.
- Boeckx, Cedric; Grohmann, Kleanthes K. (2007). "The BIOLINGUISTICS Manifesto". Biolinguistics. 1: 001–008. doi:10.5964/bioling.8583. ISSN 1450-3417. S2CID 170315284.
- Boeckx, Cedric; Longa, Victor M. (2011). "Lenneberg's Views on Language Development and Evolution and Their Relevance for Modern Biolinguistics". Biolinguistics. 5 (3): 254–273. doi:10.5964/bioling.8851. S2CID 17101093. Retrieved 10 April 2019.
- Berwick, Robert C.; Chomsky, Noam (March 2016). "Biolinguistics Evolving". Oxford University Press. Retrieved February 25, 2024.
- "Biolinguistics Evolving" (PDF). Michigan State University. Retrieved February 25, 2024.
- Miyagawa, Shigeru; Ojima, Shiro; Berwick, Robert C.; Okanoya, Kazuo (June 9, 2014). "The integration hypothesis of human language evolution and the nature of contemporary languages". Frontiers in Psychology. 5: 564. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00564. PMC 4048833. PMID 24936195.
- Berwick, Robert C.; Okanoya, Kazuo; Beckers, Gabriel J.L.; Bolhuis, Johan J. (2011). "Songs to syntax: the linguistics of birdsong". Trends in Cognitive Sciences. 15 (3): 113–21. doi:10.1016/j.tics.2011.01.002. PMID 21296608. S2CID 17963919. Retrieved 2020-11-30.
- Seyfarth, Robert M.; Cheney, Dorthy L.; Marler, Peter (1980). "Monkey Responses to Three Different Alarm Calls: Evidence of Predator Classification and Semantic Communication". Science. 210 (4471): 801–803. Bibcode:1980Sci...210..801S. doi:10.1126/science.7433999. JSTOR 1684570. PMID 7433999. Retrieved 2020-11-30.
- Sedivy, Julie (2020). "2. Origins of Human Language". Language in Mind: An introduction to psycholinguistics (Second ed.). New York: Oxford University Press.
- Wallin, N. L; Merker, B.; Brown, S. (2001). "3. Origins of Music and Speech: Insights from Animals". The Origins of Music. Vol. 18. University of California Press. pp. 513–521. doi:10.1525/mp.2001.18.4.513. JSTOR 10.1525/mp.2001.18.4.513. Retrieved 2020-12-02.
{{cite book}}
:|journal=
ignored (help) - Nóbrega, Vitor A.; Miyagawa, Shigeru (18 March 2015). "The precedence of syntax in the rapid emergence of human language in evolution as defined by the integration hypothesis". Frontiers in Psychology. 6: 271. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00271. PMC 4364162. PMID 25852595.
- Progovac, Ljiljana (2015-06-01). Evolutionary Syntax. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198736547.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-873654-7.
- Jackendoff, Ray (2011-07-07). "Compounding in the Parallel Architecture and Conceptual Semantics". Oxford Handbooks Online. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199695720.013.0006.
- Anna Maria Di Sciullo (November 2013). "Exocentric Compounds, Language and Proto-language". Language & Information Society. 20: 1–25. doi:10.29211/soli.2013.20..001. ISSN 1598-1886.
- Miyagawa, Shigeru; Berwick, Robert; Okanoya, Kazuo (2013). "The emergence of hierarchical structure in human language". Frontiers in Psychology. 4: 71. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00071. PMC 3577014. PMID 23431042.
- Chomsky, Noam. "New Horizons in the Study of Language and Mind". Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 2020-11-30.
- Velmezova, Ekaterina; Kull, Kalevi; Cowley, Stephen (eds.) 2015. Biosemiotic Perspectives on Language and Linguistics. (Biosemiotics 13.) Cham: Springer.
- Martins, Pedro Tiago; Boeckx, Cedric (2016-12-01). "What we talk about when we talk about biolinguistics". Linguistics Vanguard. -1 (open–issue). doi:10.1515/lingvan-2016-0007. S2CID 131936047.
- Poeppel, David; Embick, David (2005). "Defining the Relation Between Linguistics and Neuroscience". In Anne Cutler (ed.). Twenty-First Century Psycholinguistics: Four Cornerstones. Lawrence Erlbaum.
- Mondal, Prakash. 2019: Language, Biology, and Cognition: A Critical Perspective.[1]. Berlin/New York: Springer Nature.
- Mondal, Prakash. 2022: A Critical Perspective on the (Neuro)biological Foundations of Language and Linguistic Cognition. Integrative Psychological and Behavioral Science: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12124-022-09741-0
- Lieberman, Philip (1984). The Biology and Evolution of Language. Harvard University.
- Sciullo, Anna Maria Di; Jenkins, Lyle (September 2016). "Biolinguistics and the human language faculty". Language. 92 (3): e205 – e236. doi:10.1353/lan.2016.0056. S2CID 151533338.
- Hickok, Greg (6 September 2009). "The functional neuroanatomy of language". Physics of Life Reviews. 6 (3): 121–43. Bibcode:2009PhLRv...6..121H. doi:10.1016/j.plrev.2009.06.001. PMC 2747108. PMID 20161054.
- Jenkins, Lyle (2000). Biolinguistics: Exploring the biology of language. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. pp. 76–108.
- Trudgill, Peter (2004). "The impact of language contact and social structure on linguistic structure: Focus on the dialects of modern Greek". Dialectology Meets Typology: Dialect Grammar from a Cross-linguistic Perspective. 153: 435–452.
- Tallerman, Maggie (August 2017). "Can the integration hypothesis account for language evolution?". Journal of Neurolinguistics. 43: 254–262. doi:10.1016/j.jneuroling.2016.06.006. S2CID 53188478. Retrieved 2020-11-16.
- Miyagawa, S. (2010). Why Agree? Why Move?: Unifying Agreement-Based and Discourse-Configurational Languages. Linguistic Inquiry Monographs. MIT Press. ISBN 9780262013611.
{{cite book}}
:|website=
ignored (help) - Chomsky, N. (1995). The Minimalist Program. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
- Hale, Kenneth L.; Keyser, Samuel Jay; Bromberger, Sylvain (1993). The View from building 20 : essays in linguistics in honor of Sylvain Bromberger. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press.
- Sedivy, Julie (2020). Language in Mind: An introduction to psycholinguistics (Second ed.). New York: Oxford University Press.
Conferences
- Biolinguistic Investigations Conference, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, February 2007.
- Conference on Biolinguistics: Language Evolution and Variation, Università di Venezia, June 2007.
- ICREA International Symposium in Biolinguistics, Universitat de Barcelona, October 2012.
- The Journal of Biolinguistics
External links
- Media related to Biolinguistics at Wikimedia Commons
- Biolinguistics Journal
Biolinguistics can be defined as the study of biology and the evolution of language It is highly interdisciplinary as it is related to various fields such as biology linguistics psychology anthropology mathematics and neurolinguistics to explain the formation of language It seeks to yield a framework by which we can understand the fundamentals of the faculty of language This field was first introduced by Massimo Piattelli Palmarini professor of Linguistics and Cognitive Science at the University of Arizona It was first introduced in 1971 at an international meeting at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT Massimo Piattelli Palmarini Biolinguistics also called the biolinguistic enterprise or the biolinguistic approach is believed to have its origins in Noam Chomsky s and Eric Lenneberg s work on language acquisition that began in the 1950s as a reaction to the then dominant behaviorist paradigm Fundamentally biolinguistics challenges the view of human language acquisition as a behavior based on stimulus response interactions and associations Chomsky and Lenneberg militated against it by arguing for the innate knowledge of language Chomsky in 1960s proposed the Language Acquisition Device LAD as a hypothetical tool for language acquisition that only humans are born with Similarly Lenneberg 1967 formulated the Critical Period Hypothesis the main idea of which being that language acquisition is biologically constrained These works were regarded as pioneers in the shaping of biolinguistic thought in what was the beginning of a change in paradigm in the study of language Origins of biolinguisticsThe investigation of the biological foundations of language is associated with two historical periods namely that of the 19th century primarily via Darwinian evolutionary theory and the 20th century primarily via the integration of the mathematical linguistics in the form of Chomskyan generative grammar with neuroscience 19th century Darwin s theory of evolution Darwinism inspired many researchers to study language in particular the evolution of language via the lens of biology Darwin s theory regarding the origin of language attempts to answer three important questions Did individuals undergo something like selection as they evolved Did selection play a role in producing the capacity for language in humans If selection did play a role was selection primarily responsible for the emergence of language was it just one of the several contributing causes Dating back to 1821 German linguist August Schleicher was the representative pioneer of biolinguistics discussing the evolution of language based on Darwin s theory of evolution Since linguistics had been believed to be a form of historical science under the influence of the Societe de Linguistique de Paris speculations of the origin of language were not permitted As a result hardly did any prominent linguist write about the origin of language apart from German linguist Hugo Schuchardt Darwinism addressed the arguments of other researchers and scholars much as Max Muller by arguing that language use while requiring a certain mental capacity also stimulates brain development enabling long trains of thought and strengthening power Darwin drew an extended analogy between the evolution of languages and species noting in each domain the presence of rudiments of crossing and blending and variation and remarking on how each development gradually through a process of struggle 20th century Biological foundation of language The first phase in the development of biolinguistics runs through the late 1960s with the publication of Lennberg s Biological Foundation of Language 1967 During the first phase work focused on specifying the boundary conditions for human language as a system of cognition language development as it presents itself in the acquisition sequence that children go through when they learn a language genetics of language disorders that create specific language disabilities including dyslexia and deafness language evolution During this period the greatest progress was made in coming to a better understanding of the defining properties of human language as a system of cognition Three landmark events shaped the modern field of biolinguistics two important conferences were convened in the 1970s and a retrospective article was published in 1997 by Lyle Jenkins 1974 The first official biolinguistic conference was organized by him in 1974 bringing together evolutionary biologists neuroscientists linguists and others interested in the development of language in the individual its origins and evolution 1976 another conference was held by the New York Academy of Science after which numerous works on the origin of language were published 1997 For the 40th anniversary of transformational generative grammar Lyle Jenkins wrote an article titled Biolinguistics Structure development and evolution of language The second phase began in the late 1970s In 1976 Chomsky formulated the fundamental questions of biolinguistics as follows i function ii structure iii physical basis iv development in the individual v evolutionary development In the late 1980s a great deal of progress was made in answering questions about the development of language This then prompted further questions about language design function and the evolution of language The following year Juan Uriagereka a graduate student of Howard Lasnik wrote the introductory text to Minimalist Syntax Rhyme and Reason Their work renewed interest in biolinguistics catalysing many linguists to look into biolinguistics with their colleagues in adjacent scientific disciplines Both Jenkins and Uriagereka stressed the importance of addressing the emergence of the language faculty in humans At around the same time geneticists discovered a link between the language deficit manifest by the KE family members and the gene FOXP2 Although FOXP2 is not the gene responsible for language this discovery brought many linguists and scientists together to interpret this data renewing the interest of biolinguistics Although many linguists have differing opinions when it comes to the history of biolinguistics Chomsky believes that its history was simply that of transformational grammar While Professor Anna Maria Di Sciullo claims that the interdisciplinary research of biology and linguistics in the 1950s 1960s led to the rise of biolinguistics Furthermore Jenkins believes that biolinguistics was the outcome of transformational grammarians studying human linguistic and biological mechanisms On the other hand linguists Martin Nowak and Charles Yang argue that biolinguistics originating in the 1970s is distinct transformational grammar rather a new branch of the linguistics biology research paradigm initiated by transformational grammar DevelopmentsChomsky s Theories Universal Grammar and Generative Grammar Noam Chomsky In Aspects of the theory of Syntax Chomsky proposed that languages are the product of a biologically determined capacity present in all humans located in the brain He addresses three core questions of biolinguistics what constitutes the knowledge of language how is knowledge acquired how is the knowledge put to use A great deal of ours must be innate supporting his claim with the fact that speakers are capable of producing and understanding novel sentences without explicit instructions Chomsky proposed that the form of the grammar may emerge from the mental structure afforded by the human brain and argued that formal grammatical categories such as nouns verbs and adjectives do not exist The linguistic theory of generative grammar thereby proposes that sentences are generated by a subconscious set of procedures which are part of an individual s cognitive ability These procedures are modeled through a set of formal grammatical rules which are thought to generate sentences in a language Chomsky focuses on the mind of the language learner or user and proposed that internal properties of the language faculty are closely linked to the physical biology of humans He further introduced the idea of a Universal Grammar UG theorized to be inherent to all human beings From the view of Biolinguistic approach the process of language acquisition would be fast and smooth because humans naturally obtain the fundamental perceptions toward Universal Grammar which is opposite to the usage based approach UG refers to the initial state of the faculty of language a biologically innate organ that helps the learner make sense of the data and build up an internal grammar The theory suggests that all human languages are subject to universal principles or parameters that allow for different choices values It also contends that humans possess generative grammar which is hard wired into the human brain in some ways and makes it possible for young children to do the rapid and universal acquisition of speech Elements of linguistic variation then determine the growth of language in the individual and variation is the result of experience given the genetic endowment and independent principles reducing complexity Chomsky s work is often recognized as the weak perspective of biolinguistics as it does not pull from other fields of study outside of linguistics Modularity Hypothesis According to Chomsky the human s brains consist of various sections which possess their individual functions such as the language faculty visual recognition Language Acquisition Device The acquisition of language is a universal feat and it is believed we are all born with an innate structure initially proposed by Chomsky in the 1960s The Language Acquisition Device LAD was presented as an innate structure in humans which enabled language learning Individuals are thought to be wired with universal grammar rules enabling them to understand and evaluate complex syntactic structures Proponents of the LAD often quote the argument of the poverty of negative stimulus suggesting that children rely on the LAD to develop their knowledge of a language despite not being exposed to a rich linguistic environment Later Chomsky exchanged this notion instead for that of Universal Grammar providing evidence for a biological basis of language Minimalist Program The Minimalist Program MP was introduced by Chomsky in 1993 and it focuses on the parallel between language and the design of natural concepts Those invested in the Minimalist Program are interested in the physics and mathematics of language and its parallels with our natural world For example Piatelli Palmarini studied the isomorphic relationship between the Minimalist Program and Quantum Field Theory The Minimalist Program aims to figure out how much of the Principles and Parameters model can be taken as a result of the hypothetical optimal and computationally efficient design of the human language faculty and more developed versions of the Principles and Parameters approach in turn provide technical principles from which the minimalist program can be seen to follow The program further aims to develop ideas involving the and which had started to become an independent theory in the early 1990s but were then still considered as peripherals of transformational grammar Merge The Merge operation is used by Chomsky to explain the structure of syntax trees within the Minimalist program Merge itself is a process which provides the basis of phrasal formation as a result of taking two elements within a phrase and combining them In A M Di Sciullo amp D Isac s The Asymmetry of Merge 2008 they highlight the two key bases of Merge by Chomsky Merge is binary Merge is recursive In order to understand this take the following sentence Emma dislikes the pie This phrase can be broken down into its lexical items VP DP Emma V V dislikes DP D the NP pie The above phrasal representation allows for an understanding of each lexical item In order to build a tree using Merge using bottom up formation the two final elements of the phrase are selected and then combined to form a new element on the tree In image a you can see that the determiner the and the Noun Phrase pie are both selected Through the process of Merge the new formed element on the tree is the determiner Phrase DP which holds the pie which is visible in b a Selection of the final two element of the phrase b The two selected elements are then merged and they produce one new constituent known as the Determiner Phrase DP c Selection of DP the pie with V dislikes d Merge operation has occurred yielded new element on tree V V bar e Selection of V dislikes the pie and DP subject Emma f Merge operation has undergone yielded new element on tree VPCore components In a minimalist approach there are three core components of the language faculty proposed Sensory Motor system SM Conceptual Intentional system CI and Narrow Syntax NS SM includes biological requisites for language production and perception such as articulatory organs and CI meets the biological requirements related to inference interpretation and reasoning those involved in other cognitive functions As SM and CI are finite the main function of NS is to make it possible to produce infinite numbers of sound meaning pairs Relevance of Natural Law It is possible that the core principles of The Faculty of Language be correlated to natural laws such as for example the Fibonacci sequence an array of numbers where each consecutive number is a sum of the two that precede it see for example the discussion Uriagereka 1997 and Carnie and Medeiros 2005 According to the hypothesis being developed the essential properties of language arise from nature itself the efficient growth requirement appears everywhere from the pattern of petals in flowers leaf arrangements in trees and the spirals of a seashell to the structure of DNA and proportions of human head and body Natural Law in this case would provide insight on concepts such as binary branching in syntactic trees and well as the Merge operation This would translate to thinking it in terms of taking two elements on a syntax tree and such that their sum yields another element that falls below on the given syntax tree Refer to trees above in Minimalist Program By adhering to this sum of two elements that precede it provides support for binary structures Furthermore the possibility of ternary branching would deviate from the Fibonacci sequence and consequently would not hold as strong support to the relevance of Natural Law in syntax Biolinguistics Challenging the Usage Based Approach As mentioned above biolinguistics challenges the idea that the acquisition of language is a result of behavior based learning This alternative approach the biolinguistics challenges is known as the usage based UB approach UB supports that idea that knowledge of human language is acquired via exposure and usage One of the primary issues that is highlighted when arguing against the Usage Based approach is that UB fails to address the issue of poverty of stimulus whereas biolinguistics addresses this by way of the Language Acquisition Device Lenneberg and the Role of Genes Another major contributor to the field is Eric Lenneberg In is book Biological Foundation of Languages Lenneberg 1967 suggests that different aspects of human biology that putatively contribute to language more than genes at play This integration of other fields to explain language is recognized as the strong view in biolinguistics While they are obviously essential and while genomes are associated with specific organisms genes do not store traits or faculties in the way that linguists including Chomskyans sometimes seem to imply Contrary to the concept of the existence of a language faculty as suggested by Chomsky Lenneberg argues that while there are specific regions and networks crucially involved in the production of language there is no single region to which language capacity is confined and that speech as well as language is not confined to the cerebral cortex Lenneberg considered language as a species specific mental organ with significant biological properties He suggested that this organ grows in the mind brain of a child in the same way that other biological organs grow showing that the child s path to language displays the hallmark of biological growth According to Lenneberg genetic mechanisms plays an important role in the development of an individual s behavior and is characterized by two aspects The acknowledgement of an indirect relationship between genes and traits and The rejection of the existence of special genes for language that is the rejection of the need for a specifically linguistic genotype Based on this Lenneberg goes on further to claim that no kind of functional principle could be stored in an individual s genes rejecting the idea that there exist genes for specific traits including language In other words that genes can contain traits He then proposed that the way in which genes influence the general patterns of structure and function is by means of their action upon ontogenesis of genes as a causal agent which is individually the direct and unique responsible for a specific phenotype criticizing prior hypothesis by Charles Goodwin Recent DevelopmentsGenerative Procedure Accepted At Present amp Its Developments In biolinguistics language is recognised to be based on recursive generative procedure that retrieves words from the lexicon and applies them repeatedly to output phrases This generative procedure was hypothesised to be a result of a minor brain mutation due to evidence that word ordering is limited to externalisation and plays no role in core syntax or semantics Thus different lines of inquiry to explain this were explored The most commonly accepted line of inquiry to explain this is Noam Chomsky s minimalist approach to syntactic representations In 2016 Chomsky and Berwick defined the minimalist program under the Strong Minimalist Thesis in their book Why Only Us by saying that language is mandated by efficient computations and thus keeps to the simplest recursive operations The main basic operation in the minimalist program is merge Under merge there are two ways in which larger expressions can be constructed externally and internally Lexical items that are merged externally build argument representations with disjoint constituents The internal merge creates constituent structures where one is a part of another This induces displacement the capacity to pronounce phrases in one position but interpret them elsewhere Recent investigations of displacement concur to a slight rewiring in cortical brain regions that could have occurred historically and perpetuated generative grammar Upkeeping this line of thought in 2009 Ramus and Fishers speculated that a single gene could create a signalling molecule to facilitate new brain connections or a new area of the brain altogether via prenatally defined brain regions This would result in information processing greatly important to language as we know it The spread of this advantage trait could be responsible for secondary externalisation and the interaction we engage in If this holds then the objective of biolinguistics is to find out as much as we can about the principles underlying mental recursion Human versus Animal Communication Compared to other topics in linguistics where data can be displayed with evidence cross linguistically due to the nature of biolinguistics and that it is applies to the entirety of linguistics rather than just a specific subsection examining other species can assist in providing data Although animals do not have the same linguistic competencies as humans it is assumed that they can provide evidence for some linguistic competence The relatively new science of evo devo that suggests everyone is a common descendant from a single tree has opened pathways into gene and biochemical study One way in which this manifested within biolinguistics is through the suggestion of a common language gene namely FOXP2 Though this gene is subject to debate there have been interesting recent discoveries made concerning it and the part it plays in the secondary externalization process Recent studies of birds and mice resulted in an emerging consensus that FOXP2 is not a blueprint for internal syntax nor the narrow faculty of language but rather makes up the regulatory machinery pertaining to the process of externalization It has been found to assist sequencing sound or gesture one after the next hence implying that FOXP2 helps transfer knowledge from declarative to procedural memory Therefore FOXP2 has been discovered to be an aid in formulating a linguistic input output system that runs smoothly The Integration Hypothesis According to the Integration Hypothesis human language is the combination of the Expressive E component and the Lexical L component At the level of words the L component contains the concept and meaning that we want to convey The E component contains grammatical information and inflection For phrases we often see an alternation between the two components In sentences the E component is responsible for providing the shape and structure to the base level lexical words while these lexical items and their corresponding meanings found in the lexicon make up the L component This has consequences for our understanding of i the origins of the E and L components found in bird and monkey communication systems ii the rapid emergence of human language as related to words iii evidence of hierarchical structure within compound words iv the role of phrases in the detection of the structure building operation Merge and v the application of E and L components to sentences In this way we see that the Integration Hypothesis can be applied to all levels of language the word phrasal and sentence level The Origins of the E and L systems in Bird and Monkey Communication Systems Through the application of the Integration Hypothesis it can be seen that the interaction between the E and L components enables language structure E component and lexical items L component to operate simultaneously within one form of complex communication human language However these two components are thought to have emerged from two pre existing separate communication systems in the animal world The communication systems of birds and monkeys have been found to be antecedents to human language The bird song communication system is made up entirely of the E component while the alarm call system used by monkeys is made up of the L component Human language is thought to be the byproduct of these two separate systems found in birds and monkeys due to parallels between human communication and these two animal communication systems The communication systems of songbirds is commonly described as a system that is based on syntactic operations Specifically bird song enables the systematic combination of sound elements in order to string together a song Likewise human languages also operate syntactically through the combination of words which are calculated systematically While the mechanics of bird song thrives off of syntax it appears as though the notes syllables and motifs that are combined in order to elicit the different songs may not necessarily contain any meaning The communication system of songbirds also lacks a lexicon that contains a set of any sort of meaning to referent pairs Essentially this means that an individual sound produced by a songbird does not have meaning associated with it the way a word does in human language Bird song is capable of being structured but it is not capable of carrying meaning In this way the prominence of syntax and the absence of lexical meaning presents bird song as a strong candidate for being a simplified antecedent of the E component that is found in human language as this component also lacks lexical information While birds that use bird song can rely on just this E component to communicate human utterances require lexical meaning in addition to structural operations a part of the E component as human language is unable to operate with just syntactic structure or structural function words alone This is evident as human communication does in fact consist of a lexicon and humans produce combined sequences of words that are meaningful best known as sentences This suggests that part of human language must have been adapted from another animal s communication system in order for the L component to arise A well known study by Seyfarth et al investigated the referential nature of the alarm calls of vervet monkeys These monkeys have three set alarm calls with each call directly mapping on to one of the following referents a leopard an eagle or a snake Each call is used to warn other monkeys about the presence of one of these three predators in their immediate environmental surroundings The main idea is that the alarm call contains lexical information that can be used to represent the referent that is being referred to Essentially the entire communication system used by monkeys is made up of the L system such that only these lexical based calls are needed to effectively communicate This is similar to the L component found in human language in which content words are used to refer to a referent in the real world containing the relevant lexical information The L component in human language is however a much more complex variant of the L component found in vervet monkey communication systems humans use many more than just 3 word forms to communicate While vervet monkeys are capable of communicating solely with the L component humans are not as communication with just content words does not output well formed grammatical sentences It is for this reason that the L component is combined with the E component responsible for syntactic structure in order to output human language The Rapid Emergence of Human Language As traces of the E and L components have been found in nature the integration hypothesis asserts that these two systems existed before human language and that it was the combination of these two pre existing systems that rapidly led to the emergence of human language The Integration Hypothesis posits that it was the grammatical operator Merge that triggered the combination of the E and L systems to create human language In this view language emerged rapidly and fully formed already containing syntactical structure This is in contrast to the Gradualist Approach where it is thought that early forms of language did not have syntax Instead supporters of the Gradualist Approach believe language slowly progressed through a series of stages as a result of a simple combinatory operator that generated flat structures Beginning with a one word stage then a two word stage then a three word stage etc language is thought to have developed hierarchy in later stages In the article The precedence of syntax in the rapid emergence of human language in evolution as defined by the integration hypothesis Nobrega amp Miyagawa outline the Integration Hypothesis as it applies to words To explain the Integration Hypothesis as it relates to words everyone must first agree on the definition of a word While this seems fairly straightforward in English this is not the case for other languages To allow for cross linguistic discussion the idea of a root is used instead where a root encapsulates a concept at the most basic level In order to differentiate between roots and words it must be noted that roots are completely devoid of any information relating to grammatical category or inflection Therefore roots form the lexical component of the Integration Hypothesis while grammatical category noun verb adjective and inflectional properties e g case number tense etc form the expressive component A root L layer is integrated with the E layer to show that there is underlying hierarchical structure within words Adapted from Norega amp Miyagawa 48 Thus at the most basic level for the formation of a word in human language there must be a combination of the L component with the E component When we know a word in a language we must know both components the concept that it relates to as well as its grammatical category and inflection The former is the L component the latter is the E component The Integration Hypothesis suggests that it was the grammatical operator Merge that triggered this combination occurring when one linguistic object L layer satisfies the grammatical feature of another linguistic object E layer This means that L components are not expected to directly combine with each other Based on this analysis it is believed that human language emerged in a single step Before this rapid emergence the L component roots existed individually lacked grammatical features and were not combined with each other However once this was combined with the E component it led to the emergence of human language with all the necessary characteristics Hierarchical structures of syntax are already present within words because of the integration of these two layers This pattern is continued when words are combined with each other to make phrases as well as when phrases are combined into sentences Therefore the Integration Hypothesis posits that once these two systems were integrated human language appeared fully formed and did not require additional stages Evidence of Hierarchical Structure Within Compound Words One possible internal structure of unlockable is shown In this image the meaning is that something is able to be unlocked Adapted from Norega amp Miyagawa 39 One possible internal structure of unlockable is shown In this image the meaning is that something is not able to locked Adapted from Norega amp Miyagawa 39 Compound words are a special point of interest with the Integration Hypothesis as they are further evidence that words contain internal structure The Integration Hypothesis analyzes compound words differently compared to previous gradualist theories of language development As previously mentioned in the Gradualist Approach compound words are thought of as part of a proto syntax stage to the human language In this proposal of a lexical protolanguage compounds are developed in the second stage through a combination of single words by a rudimentary recursive n ary operation that generates flat structures However the Integration Hypothesis challenges this belief claiming that there is evidence to suggest that words are internally complex In English for example the word unlockable is ambiguous because of two possible structures within It can either mean something that is able to be unlocked unlock able or it can mean something that is not lockable un lockable This ambiguity points to two possible hierarchical structures within the word it cannot have the flat structure posited by the Gradualist Approach With this evidence supporters of the Integration Hypothesis argue that these hierarchical structures in words are formed by Merge where the L component and E component are combined Thus Merge is responsible for the formation of compound words and phrases This discovery leads to the hypothesis that words compounds and all linguistic objects of the human language are derived from this integration system and provides contradictory evidence to the theory of an existence of a protolanguage In the view of compounds as living fossils Jackendoff alleges that the basic structure of compounds does not provide enough information to offer semantic interpretation Hence the semantic interpretation must come from pragmatics However Norega and Miyagawa noticed that this claim of dependency on pragmatics is not a property of compound words that is demonstrated in all languages The example provided by Norega and Miyagawa is the comparison between English a Germanic language and Brazilian Portuguese a Romance language English compound nouns can offer a variety of semantic interpretations For example the compound noun car man can have several possible understandings such as a man who sells cars a man who s passionate about cars a man who repairs cars a man who drives cars etc In comparison the Brazilian Portuguese compound noun peixe espada translated as sword fish only has one understanding of a fish that resembles a sword Consequently when looking at the semantic interpretations available of compound words between Germanic languages and Romance languages the Romance languages have highly restrictive meanings This finding presents evidence that in fact compounds contain more sophisticated internal structures than previously thought Moreover Norega and Miyagawa provide further evidence to counteract the claim of a protolanguage through examining exocentric VN compounds As defined one of the key components to Merge is the property of being recursive Therefore by observing recursion within exocentric VN compounds of Romance languages this proves that there must be an existence of an internal hierarchical structure which Merge is responsible for combining In the data collected by Norega and Miyagawa they observe recursion occurring in several occasions within different languages This happens in Catalan Italian and Brazilian Portuguese where a new VN compound is created when a nominal exocentric VN compound is the complement of a verb For example referring to the Catalan translation of windshield wipers neteja para brises lit clean stop breeze we can identify recursion because para brises is the complement of neteja Additionally we can also note the occurrence of recursion when the noun of a VN compound contains a list of complements For example referring to the Italian translation of rings earrings or small jewels holder porta anelli orecchini o piccoli monili lit carry rings earrings or small jewels there is recursion because of the string of complements anelli orecchini o piccoli monili containing the noun to the verb porta The common claim that compounds are fossils of language often complements the argument that they contain a flat linear structure However Di Sciullo provided experimental evidence to dispute this With the knowledge that there is asymmetry in the internal structure of exocentric compounds she uses the experimental results to show that hierarchical complexity effects are observed from processing of NV compounds in English In her experiment sentences containing object verb compounds and sentences containing adjunct verb compounds were presented to English speakers who then assessed the acceptability of these sentences Di Sciullo has noted that previous works have determined adjunct verb compounds to have more complex structure than object verb compounds because adjunct verb compounds require merge to occur several times In her experiment there were 10 English speaking participants who evaluated 60 English sentences The results revealed that the adjunct verb compounds had a lower acceptability rate and the object verb compounds had a higher acceptability rate In other words the sentences containing the adjunct verb compounds were viewed as more ill formed than the sentences containing the object verb compounds The findings demonstrated that the human brain is sensitive to the internal structures that these compounds contain Since adjunct verb compounds contain complex hierarchical structures from the recursive application of Merge these words are more difficult to decipher and analyze than the object verb compounds which encompass simpler hierarchical structures This is evidence that compounds could not have been fossils of a protolanguage without syntax due to their complex internal hierarchical structures Interactions Between E and L Components in Phrases of Human Language As previously mentioned human language is interesting because it necessarily requires elements from both E and L systems neither can stand alone Lexical items or what the Integration Hypothesis refers to as roots are necessary as they refer to things in the world around us Expression items that convey information about category or inflection number tense case etc are also required to shape the meanings of the roots In the phrase buy the books the category of each phrase is determined by the head It becomes more clear that neither of these two systems can exist alone with regards to human language when we look at the phenomenon of labeling This phenomenon refers to how we classify the grammatical category of phrases where the grammatical category of the phrase is dependent on the grammatical category of one of the words within the phrase called the head For example in the phrase buy the books the verb buy is the head and we call the entire phrase a verb phrase There is also a smaller phrase within this verb phrase a determiner phrase the books because of the determiner the What makes this phenomenon interesting is that it allows for hierarchical structure within phrases This has implications on how we combine words to form phrases and eventually sentences Lexical components cannot be directly combined with each other as shown by these ungrammatical phrases Adapted from Miyagawa et al 45 This labelling phenomenon has limitations however Some labels can combine and others cannot For example two lexical structure labels cannot directly combine The two nouns Lucy and dress cannot directly be combined Likewise neither can the noun pencil be merged with the adjective short nor can the verbs want and drink cannot be merged without anything in between As represented by the schematic below all of these examples are impossible lexical structures This shows that there is a limitation where lexical categories can only be one layer deep However these limitations can be overcome with the insertion of an expression layer in between For example to combine John and book adding a determiner such as s makes this a possible combination Another limitation regards the recursive nature of the expressive layer While it is true that CP and TP can come together to form hierarchical structure this CP TP structure cannot repeat on top of itself it is only a single layer deep This restriction is common to both the expressive layer in humans but also in birdsong This similarity strengthens the tie between the pre existing E system posited to have originated in birdsong and the E layers found in human language There is an alternation between E layers and L layers in order to create well formed phrases Adapted from Miyagawa et al 45 Due to these limitations in each system where both lexical and expressive categories can only be one layer deep the recursive and unbounded hierarchical structure of human language is surprising The Integration hypothesis posits that it is the combination of these two types of layers that results in such a rich hierarchical structure The alternation between L layers and E layers is what allows human language to reach an arbitrary depth of layers For example in the phrase Eat the cake that Mary baked the tree structure shows an alternation between L and E layers This can easily be described by two phrase rules i LP L EP and ii EP E LP The recursion that is possible is plainly seen by transforming these phrase rules into bracket notation The LP in i can be written as L EP Then adding an E layer to this LP to create an EP would result in E L EP After a more complex LP could be obtained by adding an L layer to the EP resulting in L E L EP This can continue forever and would result in the recognizable deep structures found in human language The Operation of E and L Components in the Syntax of Sentences The E and L components can be used to explain the syntactic structures that make up sentences in human languages The first component the L component contains content words This component is responsible for carrying the lexical information that relays the underlying meaning behind a sentence However combinations consisting solely of L component content words do not result in grammatical sentences This issue is resolved through the interaction of the L component with the E component The E component is made up of function words words that are responsible for inserting syntactic information about the syntactic categories of L component words as well as morphosyntactic information about clause typing question number case and focus Since these added elements complement the content words in the L component the E component can be thought of as being applied to the L component Considering that the L component is solely composed of lexical information and the E component is solely composed of syntactic information they do exist as two independent systems However for the rise of such a complex system as human language the two systems are necessarily reliant on each other This aligns with Chomsky s proposal of duality of semantics which suggests that human language is composed of these two distinct components In this way it is logical as to why the convergence of these two components was necessary in order to enable the functionality of human language as we know it today Looking at the following example taken from the article The integration hypothesis of human language evolution and the nature of contemporary languages by Miyagawa et al each word can be identified as either being either an L component or an E component in the sentence Did John eat pizza In English the E component makes up the upper layer of a tree which adds syntactic shape to the lower layer which makes up the L component that provides a sentence with its core lexical meaning Adapted from Miyagawa et al 30 The L component words of this sentence are the content words John eat and pizza Each word only contains lexical information that directly contributes to the meaning of the sentence The L component is often referred to as the base or inner component due to the inwards positioning of this constituent in a phrase structure tree It is evident that the string of words John eat pizza does not form a grammatically well formed sentence in English which suggests that E component words are necessary to syntactically shape and structure this string of words The E component is typically referred to as the outer component that shapes the inner L component as these elements originate in a position that orbits around the L component in a phrase structure tree In this example the E component function word that is implemented is did By inserting this word two types of structures are added to the expression tense and clause typing The word did is a word that is used to inquire about something that happened in the past meaning that it adds the structure of the past tense to this expression In this example this does not explicitly change the form of the verb as the verb eat in the past tense still surfaces as eat without any additional tense markers in this particular environment Instead the tense slot can be thought of as being filled by a null symbol as this past tense form does not have any phonological content Although covert this null tense marker is an important contribution from the E component word did Tense aside clause typing is also conveyed through the E component It is interesting that this function word did surfaces in the sentence initial position because in English this indicates that the string of words will manifest as a question The word did determines that the structure of the clause type for this sentence will be in the form of an interrogative question specifically a yes no question Overall the integration of the E component with the L component forms the well formed sentence Did John eat pizza and accounts for all other utterances found in human languages CritiquesAlternative Theoretical Approaches Stemming from the usage based approach the Competition Model developed by Elizabeth Bates and Brian MacWhinney views language acquisition as consisting of a series of competitive cognitive processes that act upon a linguistic signal This suggests that language development depends on learning and detecting linguistic cues with the use of competing general cognitive mechanisms rather than innate language specific mechanisms From the side of biosemiotics there has been a recent claim that meaning making begins far before the emergence of human language This meaning making consists of internal and external cognitive processes Thus it holds that such process organisation could not have only given a rise to language alone According to this perspective all living things possess these processes regardless of how wide the variation as a posed to species specific Over Emphasised Weak Stream Focus When talking about biolinguistics there are two senses that are adopted to the term strong and weak biolinguistics The weak is founded on theoretical linguistics that is generativist in persuasion On the other hand the strong stream goes beyond the commonly explored theoretical linguistics oriented towards biology as well as other relevant fields of study Since the early emergence of biolinguistics to its present day there has been a focused mainly on the weak stream seeing little difference between the inquiry into generative linguistics and the biological nature of language as well as heavily relying on the Chomskyan origin of the term As expressed by research professor and linguist Cedric Boeckx it is a prevalent opinion that biolinguistics need to focus on biology as to give substance to the linguistic theorizing this field has engaged in Particular criticisms mentioned include a lack of distinction between generative linguistics and biolinguistics lack of discoveries pertaining to properties of grammar in the context of biology and lack of recognition for the importance broader mechanisms such as biological non linguistic properties After all it is only an advantage to label propensity for language as biological if such insight is used towards a research David Poeppel a neuroscientist and linguist has additionally noted that if neuroscience and linguistics are done wrong there is a risk of inter disciplinary cross sterilization arguing that there is a Granularity Mismatch Problem Due to this different levels of representations used in linguistics and neural science lead to vague metaphors linking brain structures to linguistic components Poeppel and Embick also introduce the Ontological Incommensurability Problem where computational processes described in linguistic theory cannot be restored to neural computational processes A recent critique of biolinguistics and biologism in language sciences in general has been developed by Prakash Mondal who shows that there are inconsistencies and categorical mismatches in any putative bridging constraints that purport to relate neurobiological structures and processes to the logical structures of language that have a cognitive representational character Other Relevant FieldsTopic Description Relevance to BiolinguisticsNeurolinguistics The study of how language is represented in the brain closely tied to psycholinguistics language acquisition and the localisation of the language process Physiological mechanisms by which the brain processes in formation related to language Language Acquisition The way in which humans learn to perceive produce and comprehend language guided by Universal Grammar proposed by Chomsky children s ability to learn properties of grammar from impoverished linguistic data Language growth and maturation in individuals evolutionary processes that led to the emergence of language poverty of the stimulus Linguistic Typology The analysis comparison and classification of languages according to their common structural features Identifies similarities and differences in the languages of the world suggests languages may not be completely random Syntax The rules that govern the grammatical organization of words and phrases Generative grammar poverty of the stimulus structure dependency whereby a sentence is influenced its structure and not just the order of words Artificial Grammar Learning The intersection between cognitive psychology and linguistics Humans cognitive processes and pattern detection in a language learning context how humans learn and interpret grammar Some Researchers in Biolinguistics by alphabetical order of last name Universite du Quebec a Trois Rivieres Michael Arbib University of Southern California Antonio Benitez Burraco University of Seville Derek Bickerton University of Hawaii Cedric Boeckx Catalan institute for Advanced Studies Andrew Carnie University of Arizona Anna Maria Di Sciullo University of Quebec at Montreal Ray C Dougherty New York University NYU W Tecumseh Fitch University of Vienna Dieter Hillert San Diego State University UC San Diego Philip Lieberman Brown University Alec Marantz NYU MIT Massimo Piattelli Palmarini University of Arizona David Poeppel NYU Charles Reiss Concordia UniversitySee alsoOrigin of language Origin of speech Universal Grammar Generative Grammar Minimalist Program Merge Biosemiotics Evolutionary psychology of language NeurolinguisticsReferencesDEMIREZEN Mehmet 1988 Behaviorist theory and language learning Hacettepe universitesi Egitim Fakultesi Ogretim uyesi https dergipark org tr tr download article file 88422 Lenneberg E H 1967 Biological foundations of language New York Wiley Martins Pedro Tiago Boeckx Cedric 27 August 2016 What we talk about when we talk about biolinguistics Linguistics Vanguard 2 1 doi 10 1515 lingvan 2016 0007 S2CID 131936047 Radick Gregory November 2002 Darwin on Language and Selection Selection 3 1 7 12 doi 10 1556 Select 3 2002 1 2 S2CID 36616051 Trabant Jurgen 2001 New essays on the origin of language De Gruyter ISBN 9783110849080 Plotkin Henry 25 April 1997 Darwin Machines and the Nature of Knowledge Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674192812 Boeckx Cedric Piattelli Palmarini Massimo 2005 Language as a natural object linguistics as a natural science Linguistic Review 22 447 466 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2010 07 23 Retrieved 2014 09 15 Origins and evolution of language and speech Journal of Human Evolution 8 2 309 310 February 1979 doi 10 1016 0047 2484 79 90104 0 ISSN 0047 2484 Jenkins Jennifer 1997 Biolinguistics structure development and evolution of language Web Journal of Formal Computational and Cognitive Linguistics CiteSeerX 10 1 1 35 1374 Di Sciullo Anna Maria Boeckx Cedric 2011 The Biolinguistic Enterprise New Perspectives on the Evolution and Nature of the Human Language Faculty Volume 1 of Oxford Studies in Biolinguistics Oxford University Press 2011 ISBN 9780199553273 Why Only Us The MIT Press 2016 doi 10 7551 mitpress 10684 001 0001 ISBN 9780262333351 Wu Jieqiong 15 January 2014 An Overview of Researches on Biolinguistics Canadian Social Science pp 171 176 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 820 7700 Freidin Robert 5 March 2012 Generative Grammar Theory and its History 1st ed Routledge Leading Linguists ISBN 9780415541336 Crain Stephen Koring Loes Thornton Rosalind 2017 10 01 Language acquisition from a biolinguistic perspective Neuroscience amp Biobehavioral Reviews The Biology of Language 81 Pt B 120 149 doi 10 1016 j neubiorev 2016 09 004 ISSN 0149 7634 PMID 27633153 S2CID 505901 Călinescu Mihaela 1 January 2012 Chomsky s Biolinguistic Approach to Mind and Language Linguistic amp Philosophical Investigations 11 91 96 Logan Robert K 2007 The extended mind the emergence of language the human mind and culture Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 9780802093035 Pleyer Michael Hartmann Stefan 2019 11 14 Constructing a Consensus on Language Evolution Convergences and Differences Between Biolinguistic and Usage Based Approaches Frontiers in Psychology 10 2537 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2019 02537 ISSN 1664 1078 PMC 6868443 PMID 31803099 Piatelli Palmarini M amp Vitello G 2017 Quantum field theory and the linguistic Minimalist Program a remarkable isomorphism Retrieved 2019 04 10 Gert Webelhuth 1995 Government and Binding Theory and the Minimalist Program Principles and Parameters in Syntactic Theory Wiley Blackwell Uriagereka Juan 1998 Rhyme and Reason An Introduction to Minimalist Syntax Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press For a full description of the checking mechanism see Adger David 2003 Core Syntax A Minimalist Approach Oxford Oxford University Press and also Carnie Andrew 2006 Syntax A Generative Introduction 2nd Edition Blackwell Publishers Sciullo Anna Maria Di Isac Daniela 2008 09 30 The Asymmetry of Merge Biolinguistics 2 4 260 290 doi 10 5964 bioling 8661 ISSN 1450 3417 S2CID 57556158 Di Sciullo Anna Maria et al Winter 2010 The Biological Nature of Human Language Biolinguistics 4 S2CID 141815607 Soschen Alona 2006 Natural Law The Dynamics of Syntactic Representations in MP PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2007 02 21 Retrieved 2007 02 18 Soschen Alona 2008 03 25 On the Nature of Syntax Biolinguistics 2 2 3 196 224 doi 10 5964 bioling 8641 ISSN 1450 3417 S2CID 58891675 Ibbotson Paul 2013 The Scope of Usage Based Theory Frontiers in Psychology 4 255 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2013 00255 ISSN 1664 1078 PMC 3647106 PMID 23658552 Patrick Dewey Evolution of Language and Mind PDF Bibliotex Retrieved February 3 2024 Crain Stephen September 2016 Language Acquisition from a Biolinguistic Perspective Neuroscience amp Biobehavioral Reviews 81 2016Neuroscience amp Biobehavioral Reviews 81 Pt B 120 149 doi 10 1016 j neubiorev 2016 09 004 Retrieved February 3 2024 Boeckx Cedric Grohmann Kleanthes K 2007 The BIOLINGUISTICS Manifesto Biolinguistics 1 001 008 doi 10 5964 bioling 8583 ISSN 1450 3417 S2CID 170315284 Boeckx Cedric Longa Victor M 2011 Lenneberg s Views on Language Development and Evolution and Their Relevance for Modern Biolinguistics Biolinguistics 5 3 254 273 doi 10 5964 bioling 8851 S2CID 17101093 Retrieved 10 April 2019 Berwick Robert C Chomsky Noam March 2016 Biolinguistics Evolving Oxford University Press Retrieved February 25 2024 Biolinguistics Evolving PDF Michigan State University Retrieved February 25 2024 Miyagawa Shigeru Ojima Shiro Berwick Robert C Okanoya Kazuo June 9 2014 The integration hypothesis of human language evolution and the nature of contemporary languages Frontiers in Psychology 5 564 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2014 00564 PMC 4048833 PMID 24936195 Berwick Robert C Okanoya Kazuo Beckers Gabriel J L Bolhuis Johan J 2011 Songs to syntax the linguistics of birdsong Trends in Cognitive Sciences 15 3 113 21 doi 10 1016 j tics 2011 01 002 PMID 21296608 S2CID 17963919 Retrieved 2020 11 30 Seyfarth Robert M Cheney Dorthy L Marler Peter 1980 Monkey Responses to Three Different Alarm Calls Evidence of Predator Classification and Semantic Communication Science 210 4471 801 803 Bibcode 1980Sci 210 801S doi 10 1126 science 7433999 JSTOR 1684570 PMID 7433999 Retrieved 2020 11 30 Sedivy Julie 2020 2 Origins of Human Language Language in Mind An introduction to psycholinguistics Second ed New York Oxford University Press Wallin N L Merker B Brown S 2001 3 Origins of Music and Speech Insights from Animals The Origins of Music Vol 18 University of California Press pp 513 521 doi 10 1525 mp 2001 18 4 513 JSTOR 10 1525 mp 2001 18 4 513 Retrieved 2020 12 02 a href wiki Template Cite book title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Nobrega Vitor A Miyagawa Shigeru 18 March 2015 The precedence of syntax in the rapid emergence of human language in evolution as defined by the integration hypothesis Frontiers in Psychology 6 271 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2015 00271 PMC 4364162 PMID 25852595 Progovac Ljiljana 2015 06 01 Evolutionary Syntax Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780198736547 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 873654 7 Jackendoff Ray 2011 07 07 Compounding in the Parallel Architecture and Conceptual Semantics Oxford Handbooks Online doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199695720 013 0006 Anna Maria Di Sciullo November 2013 Exocentric Compounds Language and Proto language Language amp Information Society 20 1 25 doi 10 29211 soli 2013 20 001 ISSN 1598 1886 Miyagawa Shigeru Berwick Robert Okanoya Kazuo 2013 The emergence of hierarchical structure in human language Frontiers in Psychology 4 71 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2013 00071 PMC 3577014 PMID 23431042 Chomsky Noam New Horizons in the Study of Language and Mind Cambridge MA Cambridge University Press Retrieved 2020 11 30 Velmezova Ekaterina Kull Kalevi Cowley Stephen eds 2015 Biosemiotic Perspectives on Language and Linguistics Biosemiotics 13 Cham Springer Martins Pedro Tiago Boeckx Cedric 2016 12 01 What we talk about when we talk about biolinguistics Linguistics Vanguard 1 open issue doi 10 1515 lingvan 2016 0007 S2CID 131936047 Poeppel David Embick David 2005 Defining the Relation Between Linguistics and Neuroscience In Anne Cutler ed Twenty First Century Psycholinguistics Four Cornerstones Lawrence Erlbaum Mondal Prakash 2019 Language Biology and Cognition A Critical Perspective 1 Berlin New York Springer Nature Mondal Prakash 2022 A Critical Perspective on the Neuro biological Foundations of Language and Linguistic Cognition Integrative Psychological and Behavioral Science https doi org 10 1007 s12124 022 09741 0 Lieberman Philip 1984 The Biology and Evolution of Language Harvard University Sciullo Anna Maria Di Jenkins Lyle September 2016 Biolinguistics and the human language faculty Language 92 3 e205 e236 doi 10 1353 lan 2016 0056 S2CID 151533338 Hickok Greg 6 September 2009 The functional neuroanatomy of language Physics of Life Reviews 6 3 121 43 Bibcode 2009PhLRv 6 121H doi 10 1016 j plrev 2009 06 001 PMC 2747108 PMID 20161054 Jenkins Lyle 2000 Biolinguistics Exploring the biology of language New York NY Cambridge University Press pp 76 108 Trudgill Peter 2004 The impact of language contact and social structure on linguistic structure Focus on the dialects of modern Greek Dialectology Meets Typology Dialect Grammar from a Cross linguistic Perspective 153 435 452 Tallerman Maggie August 2017 Can the integration hypothesis account for language evolution Journal of Neurolinguistics 43 254 262 doi 10 1016 j jneuroling 2016 06 006 S2CID 53188478 Retrieved 2020 11 16 Miyagawa S 2010 Why Agree Why Move Unifying Agreement Based and Discourse Configurational Languages Linguistic Inquiry Monographs MIT Press ISBN 9780262013611 a href wiki Template Cite book title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Chomsky N 1995 The Minimalist Program Cambridge MA The MIT Press Hale Kenneth L Keyser Samuel Jay Bromberger Sylvain 1993 The View from building 20 essays in linguistics in honor of Sylvain Bromberger Cambridge Mass MIT Press Sedivy Julie 2020 Language in Mind An introduction to psycholinguistics Second ed New York Oxford University Press Conferences Biolinguistic Investigations Conference Santo Domingo Dominican Republic February 2007 Conference on Biolinguistics Language Evolution and Variation Universita di Venezia June 2007 ICREA International Symposium in Biolinguistics Universitat de Barcelona October 2012 The Journal of BiolinguisticsExternal linksMedia related to Biolinguistics at Wikimedia Commons Biolinguistics Journal