Origin of language

Author: www.NiNa.Az
Feb 03, 2025 / 20:04

The origin of language its relationship with human evolution and its consequences have been subjects of study for centur

Origin of language
Origin of language
Origin of language

The origin of language, its relationship with human evolution, and its consequences have been subjects of study for centuries. Scholars wishing to study the origins of language draw inferences from evidence such as the fossil record, archaeological evidence, contemporary language diversity, studies of language acquisition, and comparisons between human language and systems of animal communication (particularly other primates). Many argue for the close relation between the origins of language and the origins of modern human behavior, but there is little agreement about the facts and implications of this connection.

The shortage of direct, empirical evidence has caused many scholars to regard the entire topic as unsuitable for serious study; in 1866, the Linguistic Society of Paris banned any existing or future debates on the subject, a prohibition which remained influential across much of the Western world until the late twentieth century. Various hypotheses have been developed on the emergence of language. While Charles Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection had provoked a surge of speculation on the origin of language over a century and a half ago, the speculations had not resulted in a scientific consensus by 1996. Despite this, academic interest has returned to the topic in the early 1990s. Linguists, archaeologists, psychologists, and anthropologists have renewed the investigation into the origin of language with modern methods.

Approaches

Attempts to explain the origin of language take a variety of forms:

  • "Continuity theories" build on the idea that language exhibits so much complexity that one cannot imagine it simply appearing from nothing in its final form; therefore it must have evolved from earlier pre-linguistic systems among humans' primate ancestors.
  • "Discontinuity theories" take the opposite approach, stating that language, as a unique trait that cannot be compared to anything found among non-humans, must have appeared fairly suddenly during the course of human evolution.
  • Some theories consider language mostly as an innate faculty—largely genetically encoded.
  • Other theories regard language as a mainly cultural system that is learned through social interaction.

Most linguistic scholars as of 2024 favor continuity-based theories, but they vary in how they hypothesize language development.[citation needed] Some among those who consider language as mostly innate avoid speculating about specific precursors in nonhuman primates, stressing simply that the language faculty must have evolved gradually.

Those who consider language as learned socially, such as Michael Tomasello, consider it developing from the cognitively controlled aspects of primate communication, mostly gestural rather than vocal. Where vocal precursors are concerned, many continuity theorists envisage language as evolving from early human capacities for song.

Noam Chomsky, a proponent of discontinuity theory, argues that a single change occurred in humans before leaving Africa, coincident with the Great Leap approximately 100,000 years ago, in which a common language faculty developed in a group of humans and their descendants. Chomsky bases his argument on the observation that any human baby of any culture can be raised in a different culture and will completely assimilate the language and behavior of the new culture in which they were raised. This implies that no major change to the human language faculty has occurred since they left Africa.

Transcending the continuity-versus-discontinuity divide, some scholars view the emergence of language as the consequence of some kind of social transformation that, by generating unprecedented levels of public trust, liberated a genetic potential for linguistic creativity that had previously lain dormant. "Ritual/speech coevolution theory" exemplifies this approach. Scholars in this intellectual camp point to the fact that even chimpanzees and bonobos have latent symbolic capacities that they rarely—if ever—use in the wild. Objecting to the sudden mutation idea, these authors argue that even if a chance mutation were to install a language organ in an evolving bipedal primate, it would be adaptively useless under all known primate social conditions. A very specific social structure – one capable of upholding unusually high levels of public accountability and trust – must have evolved before or concurrently with language to make reliance on "cheap signals" (e.g. words) an evolutionarily stable strategy.

Since the emergence of language lies so far back in human prehistory, the relevant developments have left no direct historical traces, and comparable processes cannot be observed today. Despite this, the emergence of new sign languages in modern times—Nicaraguan Sign Language, for example—may offer insights into the developmental stages and creative processes necessarily involved. Another approach inspects early human fossils, looking for traces of physical adaptation to language use. In some cases, when the DNA of extinct humans can be recovered, the presence or absence of genes considered to be language-relevant—FOXP2, for example—may prove informative. Another approach, this time archaeological, involves invoking symbolic behavior (such as repeated ritual activity) that may leave an archaeological trace—such as mining and modifying ochre pigments for body-painting—while developing theoretical arguments to justify inferences from symbolism in general to language in particular.

The time range for the evolution of language or its anatomical prerequisites extends, at least in principle, from the phylogenetic divergence of Homo (2.3 to 2.4 million years ago) from Pan (5 to 6 million years ago) to the emergence of full behavioral modernity some 50,000–150,000 years ago. Few dispute that Australopithecus probably lacked vocal communication significantly more sophisticated than that of great apes in general, but scholarly opinions vary as to the developments since the appearance of Homo some 2.5 million years ago. Some scholars assume the development of primitive language-like systems (proto-language) as early as Homo habilis, while others place the development of symbolic communication only with Homo erectus (1.8 million years ago) or with Homo heidelbergensis (0.6 million years ago) and the development of language proper with Homo sapiens, currently estimated at less than 200,000 years ago.

Using statistical methods to estimate the time required to achieve the current spread and diversity in modern languages, Johanna Nichols—a linguist at the University of California, Berkeley—argued in 1998 that vocal languages must have begun diversifying in the human species at least 100,000 years ago. Estimates of this kind are not universally accepted, but jointly considering genetic, archaeological, palaeontological, and much other evidence indicates that language likely emerged somewhere in sub-Saharan Africa during the Middle Stone Age, roughly contemporaneous with the speciation of Homo sapiens.

Language origin hypotheses

Early speculations

I cannot doubt that language owes its origin to the imitation and modification, aided by signs and gestures, of various natural sounds, the voices of other animals, and man's own instinctive cries.

— Charles Darwin, 1871. The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex

In 1861, historical linguist Max Müller published a list of speculative theories concerning the origins of spoken language:

  • Bow-wow. The bow-wow, or cuckoo, theory, which Müller attributed to the German philosopher Johann Gottfried Herder, saw early words as imitations of the cries of beasts and birds.
  • Pooh-pooh. The pooh-pooh theory saw the first words as emotional interjections and exclamations triggered by pain, pleasure, surprise, etc.
  • Ding-dong. Müller suggested what he called the ding-dong theory, which states that all things have a vibrating natural resonance, echoed somehow by humans in their earliest words.
  • Yo-he-ho. The yo-he-ho theory claims that language emerged from collective rhythmic labor; that is, the attempt to synchronize muscular efforts resulting in sounds such as heave alternating with sounds such as ho.
  • Ta-ta. The ta-ta theory did not feature in Max Müller's list, having been proposed in 1930 by Sir Richard Paget. According to the ta-ta theory, humans made the earliest words by tongue movements that mimicked manual gestures, rendering them audible.

Most scholars today consider all such theories not so much wrong—they occasionally offer peripheral insights—as naïve and irrelevant. The problem with these theories is that they rest on the assumption that once early humans had discovered a workable mechanism for linking sounds with meanings, language would automatically have evolved.[citation needed]

Much earlier, medieval Muslim scholars developed theories on the origin of language. Their theories were of five general types:

  1. Naturalist: There is a natural relationship between expressions and the things they signify. Language thus emerged from a natural human inclination to imitate the sounds of nature.
  2. Conventionalist: Language is a social convention. The names of things are arbitrary inventions of humans.
  3. Revelationist: Language was gifted to humans by God, and it was thus God—and not humans—who named everything.
  4. Revelationist-Conventionalist: God revealed to humans a core base of language—enabling humans to communicate with each other—and then humans invented the rest of language.
  5. Non-Committal: The view that conventionalist and revelationist theories are equally plausible.

Problems of reliability and deception

From the perspective of signalling theory, the main obstacle to the evolution of language-like communication in nature is not a mechanistic one. Rather, it is the fact that symbols—arbitrary associations of sounds or other perceptible forms with corresponding meanings—are unreliable and may as well be false. The problem of reliability was not recognized at all by Darwin, Müller or the other early evolutionary theorists.

Animal vocal signals are, for the most part, intrinsically reliable. When a cat purrs, the signal constitutes direct evidence of the animal's contented state. The signal is trusted, not because the cat is inclined to be honest, but because it just cannot fake that sound. Primate vocal calls may be slightly more manipulable, but they remain reliable for the same reason—because they are hard to fake. Primate social intelligence is "Machiavellian"; that is, self-serving and unconstrained by moral scruples. Monkeys, apes and particularly humans often attempt to deceive each other, while at the same time remaining constantly on guard against falling victim to deception themselves. Paradoxically, it is theorized that primates' resistance to deception is what blocks the evolution of their signalling systems along language-like lines. Language is ruled out because the best way to guard against being deceived is to ignore all signals except those that are instantly verifiable. Words automatically fail this test.

Words are easy to fake. Should they turn out to be lies, listeners will adapt by ignoring them in favor of hard-to-fake indices or cues. For language to work, listeners must be confident that those with whom they are on speaking terms are generally likely to be honest. A peculiar feature of language is displaced reference, which means reference to topics outside the currently perceptible situation. This property prevents utterances from being corroborated in the immediate "here" and "now". For this reason, language presupposes relatively high levels of mutual trust in order to become established over time as an evolutionarily stable strategy. This stability is born of a longstanding mutual trust and is what grants language its authority. A theory of the origins of language must therefore explain why humans could begin trusting cheap signals in ways that other animals apparently cannot.

The "mother tongues" hypothesis

The "mother tongues" hypothesis was proposed in 2004 as a possible solution to this problem.W. Tecumseh Fitch suggested that the Darwinian principle of "kin selection"—the convergence of genetic interests between relatives—might be part of the answer. Fitch suggests that languages were originally "mother tongues". If language evolved initially for communication between mothers and their own biological offspring, extending later to include adult relatives as well, the interests of speakers and listeners would have tended to coincide. Fitch argues that shared genetic interests would have led to sufficient trust and cooperation for intrinsically unreliable signals—words—to become accepted as trustworthy and so begin evolving for the first time.

Critics of this theory point out that kin selection is not unique to humans. So even if one accepts Fitch's initial premises, the extension of the posited "mother tongue" networks from close relatives to more distant relatives remains unexplained. Fitch argues, however, that the extended period of physical immaturity of human infants and the postnatal growth of the human brain give the human-infant relationship a different and more extended period of intergenerational dependency than that found in any other species.

The "obligatory reciprocal altruism" hypothesis

Ib Ulbæk invokes another standard Darwinian principle—"reciprocal altruism"—to explain the unusually high levels of intentional honesty necessary for language to evolve. "Reciprocal altruism" can be expressed as the principle that if you scratch my back, I'll scratch yours. In linguistic terms, it would mean that if you speak truthfully to me, I'll speak truthfully to you. Ordinary Darwinian reciprocal altruism, Ulbæk points out, is a relationship established between frequently interacting individuals. For language to prevail across an entire community, however, the necessary reciprocity would have needed to be enforced universally instead of being left to individual choice. Ulbæk concludes that for language to evolve, society as a whole must have been subject to moral regulation.

Critics point out that this theory fails to explain when, how, why or by whom "obligatory reciprocal altruism" could possibly have been enforced. Various proposals have been offered to remedy this defect. A further criticism is that language does not work on the basis of reciprocal altruism anyway. Humans in conversational groups do not withhold information to all except listeners likely to offer valuable information in return. On the contrary, they seem to want to advertise to the world their access to socially relevant information, broadcasting that information without expectation of reciprocity to anyone who will listen.

The gossip and grooming hypothesis

Gossip, according to Robin Dunbar in his book Grooming, Gossip and the Evolution of Language, language does for group-living humans what manual grooming does for other primates—it allows individuals to service their relationships and so maintain their alliances on the basis of the principle: if you scratch my back, I'll scratch yours. Dunbar argues that as humans began living in increasingly larger social groups, the task of manually grooming all one's friends and acquaintances became so time-consuming as to be unaffordable. In response to this problem, humans developed "a cheap and ultra-efficient form of grooming"—vocal grooming. To keep allies happy, one now needs only to "groom" them with low-cost vocal sounds, servicing multiple allies simultaneously while keeping both hands free for other tasks. Vocal grooming then evolved gradually into vocal language—initially in the form of "gossip". Dunbar's hypothesis seems to be supported by adaptations, in the structure of language, to the function of narration in general.

Critics of this theory point out that the efficiency of "vocal grooming"—the fact that words are so cheap—would have undermined its capacity to signal commitment of the kind conveyed by time-consuming and costly manual grooming. A further criticism is that the theory does nothing to explain the crucial transition from vocal grooming—the production of pleasing but meaningless sounds—to the cognitive complexities of syntactical speech.

Ritual/speech coevolution

The ritual/speech coevolution theory was originally proposed by social anthropologist Roy Rappaport before being elaborated by anthropologists such as Chris Knight, Jerome Lewis, Nick Enfield, Camilla Power and Ian Watts. Cognitive scientist and robotics engineer Luc Steels is another prominent supporter of this general approach, as is biological anthropologist and neuroscientist Terrence Deacon. A more recent champion of the approach is the Chomskyan specialist in linguistic syntax, Cedric Boeckx.

These scholars argue that there can be no such thing as a "theory of the origins of language". This is because language is not a separate adaptation, but an internal aspect of something much wider—namely, the entire domain known to anthropologists as human symbolic culture. Attempts to explain language independently of this wider context have failed, say these scientists, because they are addressing a problem with no solution. Language would not work outside its necessary environment of confidence-building social mechanisms and institutions. For example, it would not work for a nonhuman ape communicating with others of its kind in the wild. Not even the cleverest nonhuman ape could make language work under such conditions.

Lie and alternative, inherent in language ... pose problems to any society whose structure is founded on language, which is to say all human societies. I have therefore argued that if there are to be words at all it is necessary to establish The Word, and that The Word is established by the invariance of liturgy.

— Roy Rappaport

Advocates of this school of thought point out that words are cheap. Should an especially clever nonhuman ape, or even a group of articulate nonhuman apes, try to use words in the wild, they would carry no conviction. The primate vocalizations that do carry conviction—those they actually use—are unlike words, in that they are emotionally expressive, intrinsically meaningful, and reliable because they are relatively costly and hard to fake.

Oral and gestural languages consist of pattern-making whose cost is essentially zero. As pure social conventions, signals of this kind cannot evolve in a Darwinian social world—they are a theoretical impossibility. Being intrinsically unreliable, language works only if one can build up a reputation for trustworthiness within a certain kind of society—namely, one where symbolic cultural facts (sometimes called "institutional facts") can be established and maintained through collective social endorsement. In any hunter-gatherer society, the basic mechanism for establishing trust in symbolic cultural facts is collective ritual. Therefore, the task facing researchers into the origins of language is more multidisciplinary than is usually supposed. It involves addressing the evolutionary emergence of human ritual, kinship, religion and symbolic culture taken as a whole, with language an important but subsidiary component.

In a 2023 article, Cedric Boeckx endorses the Rappaport/Searle/Knight way of capturing the "special" nature of human words. Words are symbols. This means that, from a standpoint in Darwinian signal evolution theory, they are "patently false signals." Words are facts, but "facts whose existence depends entirely on subjective belief". In philosophical terms, they are "institutional facts": fictions that are granted factual status within human social institutions From this standpoint, according to Boeckx, linguistic utterances are symbolic to the extent that they are patent falsehoods serving as guides to communicative intentions. "They are communicatively useful untruths, as it were." The reason why words can survive among humans despite being false is largely down to a matter of trust. The corresponding origins theory is that language can only have begun to evolve from the moment humans started reciprocally faking in communicatively helpful ways, i.e., when they became capable of upholding the levels of trust necessary for linguistic communication to work.

The point here is that an ape or other nonhuman must always carry at least some of the burden of generating the trust necessary for communication to work. That is, in order to be taken seriously, each signal it emits must be a patently reliable one, trusted because it is rooted in some way in the real world. But now imagine what might happen under social conditions where trust could be taken for granted. The signaller could stop worrying about reliability and concentrate instead on perceptual discriminability. Carried to its conclusion, this should permit digital signaling—the cheapest and most efficient kind of communication.

From this philosophical standpoint, animal communication cannot be digital because it does not have the luxury of being patently false. Costly signals of any kind can only be evaluated on an analog scale. Put differently, truly symbolic, digital signals become socially acceptable only under highly unusual conditions—such as those internal to a ritually bonded community whose members are not tempted to lie.[citation needed]

Critics of the speech/ritual co-evolution idea theory include Noam Chomsky, who terms it the "non-existence" hypothesis—a denial of the very existence of language as an object of study for natural science. Chomsky's own theory is that language emerged in an instant and in perfect form, prompting his critics in turn, to retort that only something that does not exist—a theoretical construct or convenient scientific fiction—could possibly emerge in such a miraculous way. The controversy remains unresolved.

Tool resiliency, grammar and language production

Acheulean tool use began during the Lower Paleolithic approximately 1.75 million years ago. Studies focusing on the lateralization of Acheulean tool production and language production have noted similar areas of blood flow when engaging in these activities separately; this theory suggests that the brain functions needed for the production of tools across generations is consistent with the brain systems required for producing language. Researchers used functional transcranial Doppler ultrasonography (fTDC) and had participants perform activities related to the creation of tools using the same methods during the Lower Paleolithic as well as a task designed specifically for word generation. The purpose of this test was to focus on the planning aspect of Acheulean tool making and cued word generation in language (an example of cued word generation would be trying to list all words beginning with a given letter). Theories of language developing alongside tool use has been theorized by multiple individuals; however, until recently, there has been little empirical data to support these hypotheses. Focusing on the results of the study performed by Uomini et al. evidence for the usage of the same brain areas has been found when looking at cued word generation and Acheulean tool use. The relationship between tool use and language production is found in working and planning memory respectively and was found to be similar across a variety of participants, furthering evidence that these areas of the brain are shared. This evidence lends credibility to the theory that language developed alongside tool use in the Lower Paleolithic.

Humanistic theory

The humanistic tradition considers language as a human invention. Renaissance philosopher Antoine Arnauld gave a detailed description of his idea of the origin of language in Port-Royal Grammar. According to Arnauld, people are social and rational by nature, and this urged them to create language as a means to communicate their ideas to others. Language construction would have occurred through a slow and gradual process. In later theory, especially in functional linguistics, the primacy of communication is emphasised over psychological needs.

The exact way language evolved is however not considered as vital to the study of languages. Structural linguist Ferdinand de Saussure abandoned evolutionary linguistics after having come to the firm conclusion that it would not be able to provide any further revolutionary insight after the completion of the major works in historical linguistics by the end of the 19th century. Saussure was particularly sceptical of the attempts of August Schleicher and other Darwinian linguists to access prehistorical languages through series of reconstructions of proto-languages.

Saussure's solution to the problem of language evolution involves dividing theoretical linguistics in two. Evolutionary and historical linguistics are renamed as diachronic linguistics. It is the study of language change, but it has only limited explanatory power due to the inadequacy of all of the reliable research material that could ever be made available. Synchronic linguistics, in contrast, aims to widen scientists' understanding of language through a study of a given contemporary or historical language stage as a system in its own right.

Although Saussure put much focus on diachronic linguistics, later structuralists who equated structuralism with the synchronic analysis were sometimes criticised of ahistoricism. According to structural anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss, language and meaning—in opposition to "knowledge, which develops slowly and progressively"—must have appeared in an instant.

Structuralism, as first introduced to sociology by Émile Durkheim, is nonetheless a type of humanistic evolutionary theory which explains diversification as necessitated by growing complexity. There was a shift of focus to functional explanation after Saussure's death. Functional structuralists including the Prague Circle linguists and André Martinet explained the growth and maintenance of structures as being necessitated by their functions. For example, novel technologies make it necessary for people to invent new words, but these may lose their function and be forgotten as the technologies are eventually replaced by more modern ones.

Chomsky's single-step theory

According to Chomsky's single-mutation theory, the emergence of language resembled the formation of a crystal; with digital infinity as the seed crystal in a super-saturated primate brain, on the verge of blossoming into the human mind, by physical law, once evolution added a single small but crucial keystone. Thus, in this theory, language appeared rather suddenly within the history of human evolution. Chomsky, writing with computational linguist and computer scientist Robert C. Berwick, suggests that this scenario is completely compatible with modern biology. They note that "none of the recent accounts of human language evolution seem to have completely grasped the shift from conventional Darwinism to its fully stochastic modern version—specifically, that there are stochastic effects not only due to sampling like directionless drift, but also due to directed stochastic variation in fitness, migration, and heritability—indeed, all the "forces" that affect individual or gene frequencies ... All this can affect evolutionary outcomes—outcomes that as far as we can make out are not brought out in recent books on the evolution of language, yet would arise immediately in the case of any new genetic or individual innovation, precisely the kind of scenario likely to be in play when talking about language's emergence."

Citing evolutionary geneticist Svante Pääbo, they concur that a substantial difference must have occurred to differentiate Homo sapiens from Neanderthals to "prompt the relentless spread of our species, who had never crossed open water, up and out of Africa and then on across the entire planet in just a few tens of thousands of years. ... What we do not see is any kind of 'gradualism' in new tool technologies or innovations like fire, shelters, or figurative art." Berwick and Chomsky therefore suggest language emerged approximately between 200,000 years ago and 60,000 years ago (between the appearance of the first anatomically modern humans in southern Africa and the last exodus from Africa respectively). "That leaves us with about 130,000 years, or approximately 5,000–6,000 generations of time for evolutionary change. This is not 'overnight in one generation' as some have (incorrectly) inferred—but neither is it on the scale of geological eons. It's time enough—within the ballpark for what Nilsson and Pelger (1994) estimated as the time required for the full evolution of a vertebrate eye from a single cell, even without the invocation of any 'evo-devo' effects."

The single-mutation theory of language evolution has been directly questioned on different grounds. A formal analysis of the probability of such a mutation taking place and going to fixation in the species has concluded that such a scenario is unlikely, with multiple mutations with more moderate fitness effects being more probable. Another criticism has questioned the logic of the argument for single mutation and puts forward that from the formal simplicity of Merge, the capacity Berwick and Chomsky deem the core property of human language that emerged suddenly, one cannot derive the (number of) evolutionary steps that led to it.

The Romulus and Remus hypothesis

The Romulus and Remus hypothesis, proposed by neuroscientist , seeks to address the question as to why the modern speech apparatus originated over 500,000 years before the earliest signs of modern human imagination. This hypothesis proposes that there were two phases that led to modern recursive language. The phenomenon of recursion occurs across multiple linguistic domains, arguably most prominently in syntax and morphology. Thus, by nesting a structure such as a sentence or a word within themselves, it enables the generation of potentially (countably) infinite new variations of that structure. For example, the base sentence [Peter likes apples.] can be nested in irrealis clauses to produce [Mary said [Peter likes apples.]], [Paul believed [Mary said [Peter likes apples.]]] and so forth.

The first phase includes the slow development of non-recursive language with a large vocabulary along with the modern speech apparatus, which includes changes to the hyoid bone, increased voluntary control of the muscles of the diaphragm, and the evolution of the FOXP2 gene, as well as other changes by 600,000 years ago. Then, the second phase was a rapid Chomskian single step, consisting of three distinct events that happened in quick succession around 70,000 years ago and allowed the shift from non-recursive to recursive language in early hominins.

  1. A genetic mutation that slowed down the prefrontal synthesis (PFS) critical period of at least two children that lived together.
  2. This allowed these children to create recursive elements of language such as spatial prepositions.
  3. Then this merged with their parents' non-recursive language to create recursive language.

It is not enough for children to have a modern prefrontal cortex (PFC) to allow the development of PFS; the children must also be mentally stimulated and have recursive elements already in their language to acquire PFS. Since their parents would not have invented these elements yet, the children would have had to do it themselves, which is a common occurrence among young children that live together, in a process called cryptophasia. This means that delayed PFC development would have allowed more time to acquire PFS and develop recursive elements.

Delayed PFC development also comes with negative consequences, such as a longer period of reliance on one's parents to survive and lower survival rates. For modern language to have occurred, PFC delay had to have an immense survival benefit in later life, such as PFS ability. This suggests that the mutation that caused PFC delay and the development of recursive language and PFS occurred simultaneously, which lines up with evidence of a genetic bottleneck around 70,000 years ago. This could have been the result of a few individuals who developed PFS and recursive language which gave them significant competitive advantage over all other humans at the time.

Gestural theory

The gestural theory states that human language developed from gestures that were used for simple communication.

Two types of evidence support this theory.

  1. Gestural language and vocal language depend on similar neural systems. The regions on the cortex that are responsible for mouth and hand movements border each other.
  2. Nonhuman primates can use gestures or symbols for at least primitive communication, and some of their gestures resemble those of humans, such as the "begging posture", with the hands stretched out, which humans share with chimpanzees.

Research has found strong support for the idea that oral communication and sign language depend on similar neural structures. Patients who used sign language, and who suffered from a left-hemisphere lesion, showed the same disorders with their sign language as vocal patients did with their oral language. Other researchers found that the same left-hemisphere brain regions were active during sign language as during the use of vocal or written language.

Primate gesture is at least partially genetic: different nonhuman apes will perform gestures characteristic of their species, even if they have never seen another ape perform that gesture. For example, gorillas beat their breasts. This shows that gestures are an intrinsic and important part of primate communication, which supports the idea that language evolved from gesture.

Further evidence suggests that gesture and language are linked. In humans, manually gesturing has an effect on concurrent vocalizations, thus creating certain natural vocal associations of manual efforts. Chimpanzees move their mouths when performing fine motor tasks. These mechanisms may have played an evolutionary role in enabling the development of intentional vocal communication as a supplement to gestural communication. Voice modulation could have been prompted by preexisting manual actions.

From infancy, gestures both supplement and predict speech. This addresses the idea that gestures quickly change in humans from a sole means of communication (from a very young age) to a supplemental and predictive behavior that is used despite the ability to communicate verbally. This too serves as a parallel to the idea that gestures developed first and language subsequently built upon it.

Two possible scenarios have been proposed for the development of language, one of which supports the gestural theory:

  1. Language developed from the calls of human ancestors.
  2. Language was derived from gesture.

The first perspective that language evolved from the calls of human ancestors seems logical because both humans and animals make sounds or cries. One evolutionary reason to refute this is that, anatomically, the centre that controls calls in monkeys and other animals is located in a completely different part of the brain than in humans. In monkeys, this centre is located in the depths of the brain related to emotions. In the human system, it is located in an area unrelated to emotion. Humans can communicate simply to communicate—without emotions. So, anatomically, this scenario does not work. This suggests that language was derived from gesture(humans communicated by gesture first and sound was attached later).

The important question for gestural theories is why there was a shift to vocalization. Various explanations have been proposed:

  1. Human ancestors started to use more and more tools, meaning that their hands were occupied and could no longer be used for gesturing.
  2. Manual gesturing requires that speakers and listeners be visible to one another. In many situations, they might need to communicate, even without visual contact—for example after nightfall or when foliage obstructs visibility.
  3. A composite hypothesis holds that early language took the form of part gestural and part vocal mimesis (imitative 'song-and-dance'), combining modalities because all signals (like those of nonhuman apes and monkeys) still needed to be costly in order to be intrinsically convincing. In that event, each multi-media display would have needed not just to disambiguate an intended meaning but also to inspire confidence in the signal's reliability. The suggestion is that only once community-wide contractual understandings had come into force could trust in communicative intentions be automatically assumed, at last allowing Homo sapiens to shift to a more efficient default format. Since vocal distinctive features (sound contrasts) are ideal for this purpose, it was only at this point—when intrinsically persuasive body-language was no longer required to convey each message—that the decisive shift from manual gesture to the current primary reliance on spoken language occurred.

A comparable hypothesis states that in 'articulate' language, gesture and vocalisation are intrinsically linked, as language evolved from equally intrinsically linked dance and song.

Humans still use manual and facial gestures when they speak, especially when people meet who have no language in common. There are also a great number of sign languages still in existence, commonly associated with Deaf communities. These sign languages are equal in complexity, sophistication, and expressive power, to any oral language. The cognitive functions are similar and the parts of the brain used are similar. The main difference is that the "phonemes" are produced on the outside of the body, articulated with hands, body, and facial expression, rather than inside the body articulated with tongue, teeth, lips, and breathing. (Compare the motor theory of speech perception.)

Critics of gestural theory note that it is difficult to name serious reasons why the initial pitch-based vocal communication (which is present in primates) would be abandoned in favor of the much less effective non-vocal, gestural communication. However, Michael Corballis has pointed out that it is supposed that primate vocal communication (such as alarm calls) cannot be controlled consciously, unlike hand movement, and thus it is not credible as precursor to human language; primate vocalization is rather homologous to and continued in involuntary reflexes (connected with basic human emotions) such as screams or laughter (the fact that these can be faked does not disprove the fact that genuine involuntary responses to fear or surprise exist). Also, gesture is not generally less effective, and depending on the situation can even be advantageous, for example in a loud environment or where it is important to be silent, such as on a hunt. Other challenges to the "gesture-first" theory have been presented by researchers in psycholinguistics, including David McNeill.

Tool-use associated sound in the evolution of language

Proponents of the motor theory of language evolution have primarily focused on the visual domain and communication through observation of movements. The Tool-use sound hypothesis suggests that the production and perception of sound also contributed substantially, particularly incidental sound of locomotion (ISOL) and tool-use sound (TUS). Human bipedalism resulted in rhythmic and more predictable ISOL. That may have stimulated the evolution of musical abilities, auditory working memory, and abilities to produce complex vocalizations, and to mimic natural sounds. Since the human brain proficiently extracts information about objects and events from the sounds they produce, TUS, and mimicry of TUS, might have achieved an iconic function. The prevalence of sound symbolism in many extant languages supports this idea. Self-produced TUS activates multimodal brain processing (motor neurons, hearing, proprioception, touch, vision), and TUS stimulates primate audiovisual mirror neurons, which is likely to stimulate the development of association chains. Tool use and auditory gestures involve motor-processing of the forelimbs, which is associated with the evolution of vertebrate vocal communication. The production, perception, and mimicry of TUS may have resulted in a limited number of vocalizations or protowords that were associated with tool use. A new way to communicate about tools, especially when out of sight, would have had selective advantage. A gradual change in acoustic properties, meaning, or both could have resulted in arbitrariness and an expanded repertoire of words. Humans have been increasingly exposed to TUS over millions of years, coinciding with the period during which spoken language evolved.

Mirror neurons and language origins

In humans, functional MRI studies have reported finding areas homologous to the monkey mirror neuron system in the inferior frontal cortex, close to Broca's area, one of the language regions of the brain. This has led to suggestions that human language evolved from a gesture performance/understanding system implemented in mirror neurons. Mirror neurons have been said to have the potential to provide a mechanism for action-understanding, imitation-learning, and the simulation of other people's behavior. This hypothesis is supported by some cytoarchitectonic homologies between monkey premotor area F5 and human Broca's area.

Rates of vocabulary expansion link to the ability of children to vocally mirror non-words and so to acquire the new word pronunciations. Such speech repetition occurs automatically, quickly and separately in the brain to speech perception. Moreover, such vocal imitation can occur without comprehension such as in speech shadowing and echolalia. Further evidence for this link comes from a recent study in which the brain activity of two participants was measured using fMRI while they were gesturing words to each other using hand gestures with a game of charades—a modality that some have suggested might represent the evolutionary precursor of human language. Analysis of the data using Granger Causality revealed that the mirror-neuron system of the observer indeed reflects the pattern of activity of in the motor system of the sender, supporting the idea that the motor concept associated with the words is indeed transmitted from one brain to another using the mirror system.

Not all linguists agree with the above arguments, however. In particular, supporters of Noam Chomsky argue against the possibility that the mirror neuron system can play any role in the hierarchical recursive structures essential to syntax.

Putting-down-the-baby theory

According to Dean Falk's "putting-down-the-baby" theory, vocal interactions between early hominid mothers and infants began a sequence of events that led, eventually, to human ancestors' earliest words. The basic idea is that evolving human mothers, unlike their counterparts in other primates, could not move around and forage with their infants clinging onto their backs. Loss of fur in the human case left infants with no means of clinging on. Frequently, therefore, mothers had to put their babies down. As a result, these babies needed to be reassured that they were not being abandoned. Mothers responded by developing 'motherese'—an infant-directed communicative system embracing facial expressions, body language, touching, patting, caressing, laughter, tickling, and emotionally expressive contact calls. The argument is that language developed out of this interaction.

In The Mental and Social Life of Babies, psychologist Kenneth Kaye noted that no usable adult language could have evolved without interactive communication between very young children and adults. "No symbolic system could have survived from one generation to the next if it could not have been easily acquired by young children under their normal conditions of social life."

From-where-to-what theory

image
An illustration of the "from where to what" model of language evolution

The "from where to what" model is a language evolution model that is derived primarily from the organization of language processing in the brain into two structures: the auditory dorsal stream and the auditory ventral stream. It hypothesizes seven stages of language evolution (see illustration). Speech originated for the purpose of exchanging contact calls between mothers and their offspring to find one another in the event they became separated (illustration part 1). The contact calls could be modified with intonations in order to express either a higher or lower level of distress (illustration part 2). The use of two types of contact calls enabled the first question-answer conversation. In this scenario, the child would emit a low-level distress call to express a desire to interact with an object, and the mother would respond with either another low-level distress call (to express approval of the interaction) or a high-level distress call (to express disapproval) (illustration part 3). Over time, the improved use of intonations and vocal control led to the invention of unique calls (phonemes) associated with distinct objects (illustration part 4). At first, children learned the calls (phonemes) from their parents by imitating their lip-movements (illustration part 5). Eventually, infants were able to encode into long-term memory all the calls (phonemes). Consequentially, mimicry via lip-reading was limited to infancy and older children learned new calls through mimicry without lip-reading (illustration part 6). Once individuals became capable of producing a sequence of calls, this allowed multi-syllabic words, which increased the size of their vocabulary (illustration part 7). The use of words, composed of sequences of syllables, provided the infra structure for communicating with sequences of words (i.e. sentences).

The theory's name is derived from the two auditory streams, which are both found in the brains of humans and other primates. The auditory ventral stream is responsible for sound recognition, and so it is referred to as the auditory what stream. In primates, the auditory dorsal stream is responsible for sound localization, and thus it is called the auditory where stream. Only in humans (in the left hemisphere) is it also responsible for other processes associated with language use and acquisition, such as speech repetition and production, integration of phonemes with their lip movements, perception and production of intonations, phonological long-term memory (long-term memory storage of the sounds of words), and phonological working memory (the temporary storage of the sounds of words). Some evidence also indicates a role in recognizing others by their voices. The emergence of each of these functions in the auditory dorsal stream represents an intermediate stage in the evolution of language.

A contact call origin for human language is consistent with animal studies, as like human language, contact call discrimination in monkeys is lateralised to the left hemisphere. Mice with knock-out to language related genes (such as FOXP2 and SRPX2) also resulted in the pups no longer emitting contact calls when separated from their mothers. Supporting this model is also its ability to explain unique human phenomena, such as the use of intonations when converting words into commands and questions, the tendency of infants to mimic vocalizations during the first year of life (and its disappearance later on) and the protruding and visible human lips, which are not found in other apes. This theory could be considered an elaboration of the putting-down-the-baby theory of language evolution.

Grammaticalisation theory

"Grammaticalization" is a continuous historical process in which free-standing words develop into grammatical appendages, while these in turn become ever more specialized and grammatical. An initially "incorrect" usage, in becoming accepted, leads to unforeseen consequences, triggering knock-on effects and extended sequences of change. Paradoxically, grammar evolves because, in the final analysis, humans care less about grammatical niceties than about making themselves understood. If this is how grammar evolves today, according to this school of thought, similar principles at work can be legitimately inferred among distant human ancestors, when grammar itself was first being established.

In order to reconstruct the evolutionary transition from early language to languages with complex grammars, it is necessary to know which hypothetical sequences are plausible and which are not. In order to convey abstract ideas, the first recourse of speakers is to fall back on immediately recognizable concrete imagery, very often deploying metaphors rooted in shared bodily experience. A familiar example is the use of concrete terms such as "belly" or "back" to convey abstract meanings such as "inside" or "behind". Equally metaphorical is the strategy of representing temporal patterns on the model of spatial ones. For example, English speakers might say "It is going to rain", modelled on "I am going to London." This can be abbreviated colloquially to "It's gonna rain." Even when in a hurry, English speakers do not say "I'm gonna London"—the contraction is restricted to the job of specifying tense. From such examples it can be seen why grammaticalisation is consistently unidirectional—from concrete to abstract meaning, not the other way around.

Grammaticalization theorists picture early language as simple, perhaps consisting only of nouns.p. 111 Even under that extreme theoretical assumption, however, it is difficult to imagine what would realistically have prevented people from using, say, "spear" as if it were a verb ("Spear that pig!"). People might have used their nouns as verbs or their verbs as nouns as occasion demanded. In short, while a noun-only language might seem theoretically possible, grammaticalization theory indicates that it cannot have remained fixed in that state for any length of time.

Creativity drives grammatical change. This presupposes a certain attitude on the part of listeners. Instead of punishing deviations from accepted usage, listeners must prioritise imaginative mind-reading. Imaginative creativity—emitting a leopard alarm when no leopard was present, for example—is not the kind of behaviour which, say, vervet monkeys would appreciate or reward. Creativity and reliability are incompatible demands; for "Machiavellian" primates as for animals generally, the overriding pressure is to demonstrate reliability. If humans escape these constraints, it is because in their case, listeners are primarily interested in mental states.

To focus on mental states is to accept fictions—inhabitants of the imagination—as potentially informative and interesting. An example is metaphor: a metaphor is, literally, a false statement. In Romeo and Juliet, Romeo declares "Juliet is the sun!". Juliet is a woman, not a ball of plasma in the sky, but human listeners are not (or not usually) pedants insistent on point-by-point factual accuracy. They want to know what the speaker has in mind. Grammaticalisation is essentially based on metaphor. To outlaw its use would be to stop grammar from evolving and, by the same token, to exclude all possibility of expressing abstract thought.

A criticism of all this is that while grammaticalization theory might explain language change today, it does not satisfactorily address the really difficult challenge—explaining the initial transition from primate-style communication to language as it is known today. Rather, the theory assumes that language already exists. As Bernd Heine and Tania Kuteva acknowledge: "Grammaticalisation requires a linguistic system that is used regularly and frequently within a community of speakers and is passed on from one group of speakers to another". Outside modern humans, such conditions do not prevail.

Evolution-progression model

Human language is used for self-expression; however, expression displays different stages. The consciousness of self and feelings represents the stage immediately prior to the external, phonetic expression of feelings in the form of sound (i.e. language). Intelligent animals such as dolphins, Eurasian magpies, and chimpanzees live in communities, wherein they assign themselves roles for group survival and show emotions such as sympathy. When such animals view their reflection (mirror test), they recognize themselves and exhibit self-consciousness. Notably, humans evolved in a quite different environment than that of these animals. Human survival became easier with the development of tools, shelter, and fire, thus facilitating further advancement of social interaction, self-expression, and tool-making, as for hunting and gathering. The increasing brain size allowed advanced provisioning and tools and the technological advances during the Palaeolithic era that built upon the previous evolutionary innovations of bipedalism and hand versatility allowed the development of human language.[citation needed]

Self-domesticated ape theory

According to a study investigating the song differences between white-rumped munias and its domesticated counterpart (Bengalese finch), the wild munias use a highly stereotyped song sequence, whereas the domesticated ones sing a highly unconstrained song. In wild finches, song syntax is subject to female preference—sexual selection—and remains relatively fixed. However, in the Bengalese finch, natural selection is replaced by breeding, in this case for colorful plumage, and thus, decoupled from selective pressures, stereotyped song syntax is allowed to drift. It is replaced, supposedly within 1000 generations, by a variable and learned sequence. Wild finches, moreover, are thought incapable of learning song sequences from other finches. In the field of bird vocalization, brains capable of producing only an innate song have very simple neural pathways: the primary forebrain motor centre, called the robust nucleus of arcopallium, connects to midbrain vocal outputs, which in turn project to brainstem motor nuclei. By contrast, in brains capable of learning songs, the arcopallium receives input from numerous additional forebrain regions, including those involved in learning and social experience. Control over song generation has become less constrained, more distributed, and more flexible.

One way to think about human evolution is that humans are self-domesticated apes. Just as domestication relaxed selection for stereotypic songs in the finches—mate choice was supplanted by choices made by the aesthetic sensibilities of bird breeders and their customers—so might human cultural domestication have relaxed selection on many of their primate behavioural traits, allowing old pathways to degenerate and reconfigure. Given the highly indeterminate way that mammalian brains develop—they basically construct themselves "bottom up", with one set of neuronal interactions preparing for the next round of interactions—degraded pathways would tend to seek out and find new opportunities for synaptic hookups. Such inherited de-differentiations of brain pathways might have contributed to the functional complexity that characterises human language. And, as exemplified by the finches, such de-differentiations can occur in very rapid time-frames.

Speech and language for communication

A distinction can be drawn between speech and language. Language is not necessarily spoken: it might alternatively be written or signed. Speech is among a number of different methods of encoding and transmitting linguistic information, albeit arguably[by whom?] the most natural one.

Some scholars, such as Noam Chomsky, view language as an initially cognitive development, its "externalisation" to serve communicative purposes occurring later in human evolution. According to one such school of thought, the key feature distinguishing human language is recursion, (in this context, the iterative embedding of phrases within phrases). Other scholars—notably Daniel Everett—deny that recursion is universal, citing certain languages (e.g. Pirahã) which allegedly[by whom?] lack this feature.

The ability to ask questions is considered by some[like whom?] to distinguish language from non-human systems of communication. Some captive primates (notably bonobos and chimpanzees), having learned to use rudimentary signing to communicate with their human trainers, proved able to respond correctly to complex questions and requests. Yet they failed to ask even the simplest questions themselves. Conversely, human children are able to ask their first questions (using only question intonation) at the babbling period of their development, long before they start using syntactic structures. Although babies from different cultures acquire native languages from their social environment, all languages of the world without exception—tonal, non-tonal, intonational and accented—use similar rising "question intonation" for yes–no questions. Except, of course, the ones that don't.[clarification needed] This fact is a strong evidence of the universality of question intonation. In general, according to some authors[like whom?], sentence intonation/pitch is pivotal in spoken grammar and is the basic information used by children to learn the grammar of whatever language.

Cognitive development and language

Language users have high-level reference (or deixis)—the ability to refer to things or states of being that are not in the immediate realm of the speaker. This ability is often related to theory of mind, or an awareness of the other as a being like the self with individual wants and intentions. According to Chomsky, Hauser and Fitch (2002), there are six main aspects of this high-level reference system:

  • Theory of mind
  • Capacity to acquire non-linguistic conceptual representations, such as the object/kind distinction
  • Referential vocal signals
  • Imitation as a rational, intentional system
  • Voluntary control over signal production as evidence of intentional communication
  • Number representation

Theory of mind

Simon Baron-Cohen (1999) argues that theory of mind must have preceded language use, based on evidence of use of the following characteristics as much as 40,000 years ago: intentional communication, repairing failed communication, teaching, intentional persuasion, intentional deception, building shared plans and goals, intentional sharing of focus or topic, and pretending. Moreover, Baron-Cohen argues that many primates show some, but not all, of these abilities.[citation needed] Call and Tomasello's research on chimpanzees supports this, in that individual chimps seem to understand that other chimps have awareness, knowledge, and intention, but do not seem to understand false beliefs. Many primates show some tendencies toward a theory of mind, but not a full one as humans have.

Ultimately, there is some consensus within the field that a theory of mind is necessary for language use. Thus, the development of a full theory of mind in humans was a necessary precursor to full language use.

Number representation

In one particular study, rats and pigeons were required to press a button a certain number of times to get food. The animals showed very accurate distinction for numbers less than four, but as the numbers increased, the error rate increased. In another, the primatologist Tetsuro Matsuzawa attempted to teach chimpanzees Arabic numerals. The difference between primates and humans in this regard was very large, as it took the chimps thousands of trials to learn 1–9, with each number requiring a similar amount of training time; yet, after learning the meaning of 1, 2 and 3 (and sometimes 4), children (after the age of 5.5 to 6) easily comprehend the value of greater integers by using a successor function (i.e. 2 is 1 greater than 1, 3 is 1 greater than 2, 4 is 1 greater than 3; once 4 is reached it seems most children suddenly understand that the value of any integer n is 1 greater than the previous integer). Put simply, other primates learn the meaning of numbers one by one, similar to their approach to other referential symbols, while children first learn an arbitrary list of symbols (1, 2, 3, 4...) and then later learn their precise meanings. These results can be seen as evidence for the application of the "open-ended generative property" of language in human numeral cognition.

Linguistic structures

Lexical-phonological principle

Hockett (1966) details a list of features regarded as essential to describing human language. In the domain of the lexical-phonological principle, two features of this list are most important:

  • Productivity: users can create and understand completely novel messages.
    • New messages are freely coined by blending, analogizing from, or transforming old ones.
    • Either new or old elements are freely assigned new semantic loads by circumstances and context. This says that in every language, new idioms constantly come into existence.
  • Duality (of Patterning): a large number of meaningful elements are made up of a conveniently small number of independently meaningless yet message-differentiating elements.

The sound system of a language is composed of a finite set of simple phonological items. Under the specific phonotactic rules of a given language, these items can be recombined and concatenated, giving rise to morphology and the open-ended lexicon. A key feature of language is that a simple, finite set of phonological items gives rise to an infinite lexical system wherein rules determine the form of each item, and meaning is inextricably linked with form. Phonological syntax, then, is a simple combination of pre-existing phonological units. Related to this is another essential feature of human language: lexical syntax, wherein pre-existing units are combined, giving rise to semantically novel or distinct lexical items.[This paragraph needs citation(s)]

Certain elements of the lexical-phonological principle are known to exist outside of humans. While all (or nearly all) have been documented in some form in the natural world, very few coexist within the same species. Bird-song, singing nonhuman apes, and the songs of whales all display phonological syntax, combining units of sound into larger structures apparently devoid of enhanced or novel meaning. Certain other primate species do have simple phonological systems with units referring to entities in the world. However, in contrast to human systems, the units in these primates' systems normally occur in isolation, betraying a lack of lexical syntax. There is new[when?] evidence to suggest that Campbell's monkeys also display lexical syntax, combining two calls (a predator alarm call with a "boom", the combination of which denotes a lessened threat of danger), however it is still unclear whether this is a lexical or a morphological phenomenon.

Pidgins and creoles

Pidgins are significantly simplified languages with only rudimentary grammar and a restricted vocabulary. In their early stage, pidgins mainly consist of nouns, verbs, and adjectives with few or no articles, prepositions, conjunctions or auxiliary verbs. Often the grammar has no fixed word order and the words have no inflection.

If contact is maintained between the groups speaking the pidgin for long periods of time, the pidgins may become more complex over many generations. If the children of one generation adopt the pidgin as their native language it develops into a creole language, which becomes fixed and acquires a more complex grammar, with fixed phonology, syntax, morphology, and syntactic embedding. The syntax and morphology of such languages may often have local innovations not obviously derived from any of the parent languages.

Studies of creole languages around the world have suggested that they display remarkable similarities in grammar[citation needed] and are developed uniformly from pidgins in a single generation. These similarities are apparent even when creoles do not have any common language origins. In addition, creoles are similar, despite being developed in isolation from each other. Syntactic similarities include subject–verb–object word order. Even when creoles are derived from languages with a different word order they often develop the SVO word order. Creoles tend to have similar usage patterns for definite and indefinite articles, and similar movement rules for phrase structures even when the parent languages do not.

Evolutionary timeline

Primate communication

Field primatologists can give useful insights into great ape communication in the wild. One notable finding is that nonhuman primates, including the other great apes, produce calls that are graded, as opposed to categorically differentiated, with listeners striving to evaluate subtle gradations in signallers' emotional and bodily states. Nonhuman apes seemingly find it extremely difficult to produce vocalisations in the absence of the corresponding emotional states. In captivity, nonhuman apes have been taught rudimentary forms of sign language or have been persuaded to use lexigrams—symbols that do not graphically resemble the corresponding words—on computer keyboards. Some nonhuman apes, such as Kanzi, have been able to learn and use hundreds of lexigrams.

The Broca's and Wernicke's areas in the primate brain are responsible for controlling the muscles of the face, tongue, mouth, and larynx, as well as recognizing sounds. Primates are known to make "vocal calls", and these calls are generated by circuits in the brainstem and limbic system.

In the wild, the communication of vervet monkeys has been the most extensively studied. They are known to make up to ten different vocalizations. Many of these are used to warn other members of the group about approaching predators. They include a "leopard call", a "snake call", and an "eagle call". Each call triggers a different defensive strategy in the monkeys who hear the call and scientists were able to elicit predictable responses from the monkeys using loudspeakers and prerecorded sounds. Other vocalisations may be used for identification. If an infant monkey calls, its mother turns toward it, but other vervet mothers turn instead toward that infant's mother to see what she will do.

Similarly, researchers have demonstrated that chimpanzees (in captivity) use different "words" in reference to different foods. They recorded vocalisations that chimps made in reference, for example, to grapes, and then other chimps pointed at pictures of grapes when they heard the recorded sound.

Ardipithecus ramidus

A study published in HOMO: Journal of Comparative Human Biology in 2017 claims that Ardipithecus ramidus, a hominin dated at approximately 4.5Ma, shows the first evidence of an anatomical shift in the hominin lineage suggestive of increased vocal capability. This study compared the skull of A. ramidus with 29 chimpanzee skulls of different ages and found that in numerous features A. ramidus clustered with the infant and juvenile measures as opposed to the adult measures. Such affinity with the shape dimensions of infant and juvenile chimpanzee skull architecture, it was argued, may have resulted in greater vocal capability. This assertion was based on the notion that the chimpanzee vocal tract ratios that prevent speech are a result of growth factors associated with puberty—growth factors absent in A. ramidus ontogeny. A. ramidus was also found to have a degree of cervical lordosis more conducive to vocal modulation when compared with chimpanzees as well as cranial base architecture suggestive of increased vocal capability.

What was significant in this study, according to the authors, was the observation that the changes in skull architecture that correlate with reduced aggression are the same changes necessary for the evolution of early hominin vocal ability. In integrating data on anatomical correlates of primate mating and social systems with studies of skull and vocal tract architecture that facilitate speech production, the authors argue that paleoanthropologists prior to their study have failed to understand the important relationship between early hominin social evolution and the evolution of our species' capacities for language.

While the skull of A. ramidus, according to the authors, lacks the anatomical impediments to speech evident in chimpanzees, it is unclear what the vocal capabilities of this early hominin were. While they suggest A. ramidus—based on similar vocal tract ratios—may have had vocal capabilities equivalent to a modern human infant or very young child, they concede this is a debatable and speculative hypothesis. However, they do claim that changes in skull architecture through processes of social selection were a necessary prerequisite for language evolution. As they write:

We propose that as a result of paedomorphic morphogenesis of the cranial base and craniofacial morphology Ar. ramidus would have not been limited in terms of the mechanical components of speech production as chimpanzees and bonobos are. It is possible that Ar. ramidus had vocal capability approximating that of chimpanzees and bonobos, with its idiosyncratic skull morphology not resulting in any significant advances in speech capability. In this sense the anatomical features analysed in this essay would have been exapted in later more voluble species of hominin. However, given the selective advantages of pro-social vocal synchrony, we suggest the species would have developed significantly more complex vocal abilities than chimpanzees and bonobos.

Early Homo

Anatomically, some scholars believe that features of bipedalism developed in the australopithecines around 3.5 million years ago. Around this time, these structural developments within the skull led to a more prominently L-shaped vocal tract.[page needed] In order to generate the sounds modern Homo sapiens are capable of making, such as vowels, it is vital that Early Homo populations must have a specifically shaped voice track and a lower sitting larynx. Opposing research previously suggested that Neanderthals were physically incapable of creating the full range of vocals seen in modern humans due to the differences in larynx placement. Establishing distinct larynx positions through fossil remains of Homo sapiens and Neanderthals would support this theory; however, modern research has revealed that the hyoid bone was indistinguishable in the two populations. Though research has shown a lower sitting larynx is important to producing speech, another theory states it may not be as important as once thought. Cataldo, Migliano, and Vinicius report speech alone appears inadequate for transmitting stone tool-making knowledge, and suggest that speech may have emerged due to an increase in complex social interactions.

Archaic Homo sapiens

Steven Mithen proposed the term Hmmmmm for the pre-linguistic system of communication posited to have been used by archaic Homo, beginning with Homo ergaster and reaching the highest sophistication in the Middle Pleistocene with Homo heidelbergensis and Homo neanderthalensis. Hmmmmm is an acronym for holistic (non-compositional), manipulative (utterances are commands or suggestions, not descriptive statements), multi-modal (acoustic as well as gestural and facial), musical, and mimetic.

Homo erectus

Evidence for Homo erectus potentially using language comes in the form of Acheulean tool usage. The use of abstract thought in the formation of Acheulean hand axes coincides with the symbol creation necessary for simple language. Recent language theories present recursion as the unique facet of human language and theory of mind. However, breaking down language into its symbolic parts: separating meaning from the requirements of grammar, it becomes possible to see that language does not depend on either recursion or grammar. This can be evidenced by the Pirahã language users in Brazil that have no myth or creation stories, no numbers and no colors within their language. This is to highlight that even though grammar may have been unavailable, use of foresight, planning and symbolic thought can be evidence of language as early as one million years ago with Homo erectus.

Homo heidelbergensis

Homo heidelbergensis was a close relative (most probably a migratory descendant) of Homo ergaster. Some researchers believe this species to be the first hominin to make controlled vocalisations, possibly mimicking animal vocalisations, and that as Homo heidelbergensis developed more sophisticated culture, proceeded from this point and possibly developed an early form of symbolic language.

Homo neanderthalensis

The discovery in 1989 of the (Neanderthal) Kebara 2 hyoid bone suggests that Neanderthals may have been anatomically capable of producing sounds similar to modern humans. The hypoglossal nerve, which passes through the hypoglossal canal, controls the movements of the tongue, which may have enabled voicing for size exaggeration (see size exaggeration hypothesis below) or may reflect speech abilities.

However, although Neanderthals may have been anatomically able to speak, Richard G. Klein in 2004 doubted that they possessed a fully modern language. He largely bases his doubts on the fossil record of archaic humans and their stone tool kit. Bart de Boer in 2017 acknowledges this ambiguity of a universally accepted Neanderthal vocal tract; however, he notes the similarities in the thoracic vertebral canal, potential air sacs, and hyoid bones between modern humans and Neanderthals to suggest the presence of complex speech. For two million years following the emergence of Homo habilis, the stone tool technology of hominins changed very little. Klein, who has worked extensively on ancient stone tools, describes the crude stone tool kit of archaic humans as impossible to break down into categories based on their function, and reports that Neanderthals seem to have had little concern for the final aesthetic form of their tools. Klein argues that the Neanderthal brain may have not reached the level of complexity required for modern speech, even if the physical apparatus for speech production was well-developed. The issue of the Neanderthal's level of cultural and technological sophistication remains a controversial one.[citation needed]

Based on computer simulations used to evaluate that evolution of language that resulted in showing three stages in the evolution of syntax, Neanderthals are thought to have been in stage 2, showing they had something more evolved than proto-language but not quite as complex as the language of modern humans.

Some researchers, applying auditory bioengineering models to computerised tomography scans of Neanderthal skulls, have asserted that Neanderthals had auditory capacity very similar to that of anatomically modern humans. These researchers claim that this finding implies that "Neanderthals evolved the auditory capacities to support a vocal communication system as efficient as modern human speech."

Homo sapiens

Anatomically modern humans begin to appear in the fossil record in Ethiopia some 200,000 years ago. Although there is still much debate as to whether behavioural modernity emerged in Africa at around the same time, a growing number of archaeologists nowadays[when?] invoke the southern African Middle Stone Age use of red ochre pigments—for example at Blombos Cave—as evidence that modern anatomy and behaviour co-evolved. These archaeologists argue strongly that if modern humans at this early stage were using red ochre pigments for ritual and symbolic purposes, they probably had symbolic language as well.

According to the recent African origins hypothesis, from around 60,000 – 50,000 years ago a group of humans left Africa and began migrating to occupy the rest of the world, carrying language and symbolic culture with them.

Descended larynx

image

The larynx (or voice box) is an organ in the neck housing the vocal folds, which are responsible for phonation. In humans, the larynx is descended. The human species is not unique in this respect: goats, dogs, pigs and tamarins lower the larynx temporarily, to emit loud calls. Several deer species have a permanently lowered larynx, which may be lowered still further by males during their roaring displays. Lions, jaguars, cheetahs and domestic cats also do this. However, laryngeal descent in nonhumans (according to Philip Lieberman) is not accompanied by descent of the hyoid; hence the tongue remains horizontal in the oral cavity, preventing it from acting as a pharyngeal articulator.

Larynx
image
Anatomy of the larynx, anterolateral view
Anatomical terminology
[edit on Wikidata]

Despite all this, scholars remain divided as to how "special" the human vocal tract really is. It has been shown that the larynx does descend to some extent during development in chimpanzees, followed by hyoidal descent. As against this, Philip Lieberman points out that only humans have evolved permanent and substantial laryngeal descent in association with hyoidal descent, resulting in a curved tongue and two-tube vocal tract with 1:1 proportions. He argues that Neanderthals and early anatomically modern humans could not have possessed supralaryngeal vocal tracts capable of producing "fully human speech". Uniquely in the human case, simple contact between the epiglottis and velum is no longer possible, disrupting the normal mammalian separation of the respiratory and digestive tracts during swallowing. Since this entails substantial costs—increasing the risk of choking while swallowing food—we are forced to ask what benefits might have outweighed those costs. The obvious benefit—so it is claimed—must have been speech. But this idea has been vigorously contested. One objection is that humans are in fact not seriously at risk of choking on food: medical statistics indicate that accidents of this kind are extremely rare. Another objection is that in the view of most scholars, speech as it is known emerged relatively late in human evolution, roughly contemporaneously with the emergence of Homo sapiens. A development as complex as the reconfiguration of the human vocal tract would have required much more time, implying an early date of origin. This discrepancy in timescales undermines the idea that human vocal flexibility was initially driven by selection pressures for speech, thus not excluding that it was selected for e.g. improved singing ability.

Size exaggeration hypothesis

To lower the larynx is to increase the length of the vocal tract, in turn lowering formant frequencies so that the voice sounds "deeper"—giving an impression of greater size. John Ohala argues that the function of the lowered larynx in humans, especially males, is probably to enhance threat displays rather than speech itself. Ohala points out that if the lowered larynx were an adaptation for speech, adult human males would be expected to be better adapted in this respect than adult females, whose larynx is considerably less low. However, females outperform males in verbal tests, falsifying this whole line of reasoning.

W. Tecumseh Fitch likewise argues that this was the original selective advantage of laryngeal lowering in the human species. Although (according to Fitch) the initial lowering of the larynx in humans had nothing to do with speech, the increased range of possible formant patterns was subsequently co-opted for speech. Size exaggeration remains the sole function of the extreme laryngeal descent observed in male deer. Consistent with the size exaggeration hypothesis, a second descent of the larynx occurs at puberty in humans, although only in males. In response to the objection that the larynx is descended in human females, Fitch suggests that mothers vocalizing to protect their infants would also have benefited from this ability.

Phonemic diversity

In 2011, Quentin Atkinson published a survey of phonemes from 500 different languages as well as language families and compared their phonemic diversity by region, number of speakers and distance from Africa. The survey revealed that African languages had the largest number of phonemes, and Oceania and South America had the smallest number. After allowing for the number of speakers, the phonemic diversity was compared to over 2000 possible origin locations. Atkinson's "best fit" model is that language originated in western, central, or southern Africa between 80,000 and 160,000 years ago. This predates the hypothesized southern coastal peopling of Arabia, India, southeast Asia, and Australia. It would also mean that the origin of language occurred at the same time as the emergence of symbolic culture.

Numerous linguists have criticized Atkinson's paper as misrepresenting both the phonemic data and processes of linguistic change, as language complexity does not necessarily correspond to age, and of failing to take into account the borrowing of phonemes from neighbouring languages, as some Bantu languages have done with click consonants. Recreations of his method gave possible origins of language in the Caucasus and Turkmenistan, in addition to southern and eastern Africa.

History

In religion and mythology

image
The Tower of Babel by Pieter Bruegel the Elder (1563)

The search for the origin of language has a long history in mythology. Most mythologies do not credit humans with the invention of language but speak of a divine language predating human language. Mystical languages used to communicate with animals or spirits, such as the language of the birds, are also common, and were of particular interest during the Renaissance.

Vāc is the Hindu goddess of speech, or "speech personified". As Brahman's "sacred utterance", she has a cosmological role as the "Mother of the Vedas". The Aztecs' story maintains that only a man, Coxcox, and a woman, Xochiquetzal, survived a flood, having floated on a piece of bark. They found themselves on land and had many children who were at first born unable to speak, but subsequently, upon the arrival of a dove, were endowed with language, although each one was given a different speech such that they could not understand one another.

In the Old Testament, the Book of Genesis (chapter 11) says that God prevented the Tower of Babel from being completed through a miracle that made its construction workers start speaking different languages. After this, they migrated to other regions, grouped together according to which of the newly created languages they spoke, explaining the origins of languages and nations outside of the Fertile Crescent.

Historical experiments

History contains a number of anecdotes about people who attempted to discover the origin of language by experiment. The first such tale was told by Herodotus (Histories 2.2). He relates that Pharaoh Psammetichus (probably Psammetichus I, 7th century BC) had two children raised by a shepherd, with the instructions that no one should speak to them, but that the shepherd should feed and care for them while listening to determine their first words. When one of the children cried "bekos" with outstretched arms the shepherd concluded that the word was Phrygian, because that was the sound of the Phrygian word for 'bread'. From this, Psammetichus concluded that the first language was Phrygian. King James IV of Scotland is said to have tried a similar experiment; his children were supposed to have spoken Hebrew.

Both the medieval monarch Frederick II and Akbar are said to have tried similar experiments; the children involved in these experiments did not speak. The current situation of deaf people also points into this direction.[clarification needed]

History of research

Modern linguistics did not begin until the late 18th century, and the Romantic or animist theses of Johann Gottfried Herder and Johann Christoph Adelung remained influential well into the 19th century. The question of language origin seemed inaccessible to methodical approaches, and in 1866 the Linguistic Society of Paris famously banned all discussion of the origin of language, deeming it to be an unanswerable problem. An increasingly systematic approach to historical linguistics developed in the course of the 19th century, reaching its culmination in the Neogrammarian school of Karl Brugmann and others.[citation needed]

However, scholarly interest in the question of the origin of language has only gradually been rekindled[colloquialism] from the 1950s on (and then controversially) with ideas such as universal grammar, mass comparison and glottochronology.[citation needed]

The "origin of language" as a subject in its own right emerged from studies in neurolinguistics, psycholinguistics and human evolution. The Linguistic Bibliography introduced "Origin of language" as a separate heading in 1988, as a sub-topic of psycholinguistics. Dedicated research institutes of evolutionary linguistics are a recent phenomenon, emerging only in the 1990s.

See also

References

  1. Shah, Sonia (20 September 2023). "The Animals Are Talking. What Does It Mean?". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 21 September 2023. Retrieved 21 September 2023.
  2. Żywiczyński, Przemysław; Wacewicz, Slawomir (August 2019). Statement of the Société de linguistique de Paris banning glottogenetic speculation. doi:10.3726/b15805. ISBN 978-3-631-79394-7.
  3. Tallerman, Maggie; Gibson, Kathleen Rita (2012). The Oxford handbook of language evolution. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-954111-9.
  4. Müller, F. M. 1996 [1861]. The theoretical stage, and the origin of language. Lecture 9 from Lectures on the Science of Language. Reprinted in R. Harris (ed.), The Origin of Language. Bristol: Thoemmes Press, pp. 7–41.
  5. Christiansen, Morten H; Kirby, Simon (2003). "Language evolution: the hardest problem in science?". In Christiansen, Morten H.; Kirby, Simon (eds.). Language evolution. Oxford University Press. pp. 77–93. ISBN 978-0-19-924484-3.
  6. Ulbæk, Ib (1998). "The origin of language and cognition". In Hurford, James R.; Studdert-Kennedy, Michael; Knight, Chris (eds.). Approaches to the evolution of language: social and cognitive base. Cambridge University Press. pp. 30–43. ISBN 978-0-521-63964-4.
  7. Pinker, Steven (1994). The Language Instinct. New York: W. Morrow & Co. ISBN 978-0-688-12141-9.
  8. Tomasello, Michael (1996). "The cultural roots of language". In Velichkovskiĭ, B. M.; Rumbaugh, Duane M. (eds.). Communicating meaning: the evolution and development of language. Mahwah, NJ: L. Erlbaum. ISBN 978-0-8058-2118-5.
  9. Pika, Simone; Mitani, John (2006). "Referential gestural communication in wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes)". Current Biology. 16 (6): R191 – R192. Bibcode:2006CBio...16.R191P. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2006.02.037. ISSN 0960-9822. PMID 16546066. S2CID 2273018.
  10. Dunn, M.; Greenhill, S. J.; Levinson, S. C.; Gray, R. D. (May 2011). "Evolved structure of language shows lineage-specific trends in word-order universals". Nature. 473 (7345): 79–82. Bibcode:2011Natur.473...79D. doi:10.1038/nature09923. hdl:11858/00-001M-0000-0013-3B19-B. PMID 21490599. S2CID 1588797.
  11. The Economist, "The evolution of language: Babel or babble?", 16 April 2011, pp. 85–86.
  12. Cross, Ian; Woodruff, Ghofur Eliot (23 April 2009). "Music as a Communicative medium". In Botha, Rudolf P.; Knight, Chris (eds.). The Prehistory of Language (PDF). Oxford University Press. pp. 77–98. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199545872.003.0005. ISBN 978-0-19-156287-7.
  13. Vaneechoutte, Mario (2014). "The Origin of Articulate Language Revisited: The Potential of a Semi-Aquatic Past of Human Ancestors to Explain the Origin of Human Musicality and Articulate Language" (PDF). Human Evolution. 29: 1–33.
  14. How Could Language Have Evolved, https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1001934
  15. Knight, Chris; Power, Camilla (2012). "Social conditions for the evolutionary emergence of language". In Tallerman, Maggie; Gibson, Kathleen R. (eds.). The Oxford handbook of language evolution (PDF). Oxford University Press. pp. 346–349. ISBN 978-0-19-954111-9.
  16. Rappaport, Roy (1999). Ritual and religion in the making of humanity. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-29690-8.
  17. Knight, C. (2008). "'Honest fakes' and language origins" (PDF). Journal of Consciousness Studies. 15 (10–11): 236–248.
  18. Knight, Chris (2010). "The origins of symbolic culture". In Frey, Ulrich J.; Störmer, Charlotte; Willführ, Kai P. (eds.). Homo Novus: a human without illusion (PDF). Berlin: Springer. pp. 193–211. ISBN 978-3-642-12141-8.
  19. Knight, Chris (1998). "Ritual/speech coevolution: a solution to the problem of deception". In Hurford, James R.; Studdert-Kennedy, Michael; Knight, Chris (eds.). Approaches to the evolution of language: social and cognitive base (PDF). Cambridge University Press. pp. 68–91. ISBN 978-0-521-63964-4.
  20. Knight, Chris (2006). "Language co-evolved with the rule of law". In Cangelosi, Angelo; Smith, Andrew D. M.; Kenny Smith (eds.). The evolution of language: proceedings of the 6th international conference (EVOLANG6), Rome, Italy, 12–15 April 200 (PDF). World Scientific. pp. 168–175. ISBN 978-981-256-656-0.
  21. Savage-Rumbaugh, Sue; McDonald, Kelly (1988). "Deception and social manipulation in symbol-using apes". In Byrne, Richard W.; Whiten, Andrew (eds.). Machiavellian intelligence: social expertise and the evolution of intellect in monkeys, apes, and human. Oxford: Clarendon. pp. 224–237. ISBN 978-0-19-852175-4.
  22. Kegl, J., A. Senghas and M. Coppola (1998). Creation through Contact: Sign language emergence and sign language change in Nicaragua. In M. DeGraff (ed.), Language Creation and Change: Creolization, Diachrony and Development. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press.
  23. Lieberman, P.; Crelin, E. S. (1971). "On the speech of Neandertal Man". Linguistic Inquiry. 2: 203–222.
  24. Arensburg, B.; Tillier, A. M.; Vandermeersch, B.; Duday, H.; Schepartz, L. A.; Rak, Y. (1989). "A Middle Palaeolithic human hyoid bone". Nature. 338 (6218): 758–760. Bibcode:1989Natur.338..758A. doi:10.1038/338758a0. PMID 2716823. S2CID 4309147.
  25. Diller, Karl C.; Cann, Rebecca L. (2009). "Evidence Against a Genetic-Based Revolution in Language 50,000 Years Ago". In Botha, Rudolf P.; Knight, Chris (eds.). The cradle of language. Oxford University Press. pp. 135–149. ISBN 978-0-19-954586-5.
  26. Henshilwood, Christopher Stuart; Dubreuil, Benoît (2009). "Reading the Artefacts: Gleaning Language Skills From the Middle Stone Age in Southern Africa". In Botha, Rudolf P.; Knight, Chris (eds.). The cradle of language. Oxford University Press. pp. 41–61. ISBN 978-0-19-954586-5.
  27. Knight, Chris (2009). "Language, Ochre, and the Rule of Law". In Rudolf P Botha; Chris Knight (eds.). The cradle of language. Oxford University Press. pp. 281–303. ISBN 978-0-19-954586-5.
  28. Watts, Ian (2009). "Red Ochre, Body Painting, and Language: Interpreting the Blombos Ochre". In Botha, Rudolf P.; Knight, Chris (eds.). The cradle of language. Oxford University Press. pp. 62–92. ISBN 978-0-19-954586-5.
  29. Arcadi, A. C. (August 2000). "Vocal responsiveness in male wild chimpanzees: implications for the evolution of language". Journal of Human Evolution. 39 (2): 205–223. Bibcode:2000JHumE..39..205A. doi:10.1006/jhev.2000.0415. PMID 10968929. S2CID 7403772.
  30. Johanna Nichols, 1998. The origin and dispersal of languages: Linguistic evidence. In Nina Jablonski and Leslie C. Aiello, eds., The Origin and Diversification of Language, pp. 127–70. (Memoirs of the California Academy of Sciences, 24.) San Francisco: California Academy of Sciences.
  31. Botha, Rudolf P.; Knight, Chris (2009). The cradle of language. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-954586-5.
  32. Darwin, C. (1871). "The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex, 2 vols. London: Murray, p. 56.
  33. Müller, F. M. 1996 [1861]. The theoretical stage, and the origin of language. Lecture 9 from Lectures on the Science of Language. Reprinted in R. Harris (ed.), The Origin of Language. Bristol: Thoemmes Press, pp. 7–41.
  34. Paget, R. 1930. Human speech: some observations, experiments, and conclusions as to the nature, origin, purpose and possible improvement of human speech. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
  35. Firth, J. R. 1964. The Tongues of Men and Speech. London: Oxford University Press, pp. 25–26.
  36. Stam, J. H. 1976. Inquiries into the origins of language. New York: Harper and Row, pp. 243–244.
  37. Shah, Mustafa (January 2011). "Classical Islamic Discourse on the Origins of Language: Cultural Memory and the Defense of Orthodoxy" (PDF). Numen. 58 (2–3): 314–343. doi:10.1163/156852711X562335. S2CID 55165312 – via CORE.
  38. Weiss, B. (1987). "'Ilm al-wad': An Introductory Account of a Later Muslim Philological Science". Arabica. 34 (1): 339–356. doi:10.1163/157005887X00054. S2CID 161187751.
  39. Weiss, B. (1974). "Medieval Muslim discussions of the origin of language" (PDF). Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft. 124 (1): 33–41. doi:10.1163/156852711X562335. JSTOR 43370636. S2CID 55165312.
  40. Zahavi, A. (May 1993). "The fallacy of conventional signalling". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 340 (1292): 227–230. Bibcode:1993RSPTB.340..227Z. doi:10.1098/rstb.1993.0061. PMID 8101657.
  41. Zahavi, A. and A. Zahavi 1997. The Handicap Principle: A Missing Piece in Darwin's Puzzle. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780190284589
  42. Smith, J. Maynard (1994). "Must reliable signals always be costly?". Animal Behaviour. 47 (5): 1115–1120. doi:10.1006/anbe.1994.1149. ISSN 0003-3472. S2CID 54274718.
  43. Goodall, Jane (1986). The chimpanzees of Gombe: patterns of behavior. Cambridge, MA: Belknap. ISBN 978-0-674-11649-8.
  44. Byrne, Richard W.; Whiten, Andrew. (1988). Machiavellian intelligence : social expertise and the evolution of intellect in monkeys, apes, and humans. Oxford: Clarendon. ISBN 978-0-19-852175-4.
  45. de Waal, Frans B. M. (2005). "Intentional Deception in Primates". Evolutionary Anthropology. 1 (3): 86–92. doi:10.1002/evan.1360010306. S2CID 221736130.
  46. Power, Camilla (1998). "Old wives' tales: the gossip hypothesis and the reliability of cheap signals". In Hurford, James R.; Studdert-Kennedy, Michael; Chris Knight (eds.). Approaches to the evolution of language: social and cognitive base. Cambridge University Press. pp. 111–129. ISBN 978-0-521-63964-4.
  47. Fitch, W. T. (2004). "Kin selection and 'mother tongues': a neglected component in language evolution" (PDF). In Griebel, Ulrike; Oller, D. Kimbrough (eds.). Evolution of communication systems: a comparative approach. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. pp. 275–296. ISBN 978-0-262-15111-5.
  48. Hamilton, W. D. (1964). "The genetical evolution of social behaviour. I, II". Journal of Theoretical Biology. 7 (1): 1–52. Bibcode:1964JThBi...7....1H. doi:10.1016/0022-5193(64)90038-4. PMID 5875341. S2CID 5310280.
  49. Knight, Chris (2000). "Play as Precursor of Phonology and Syntax". The Evolutionary Emergence of Language. Cambridge University Press. pp. 99–120. doi:10.1017/cbo9780511606441.007. ISBN 978-0-521-78157-2. S2CID 56418139.
  50. Tallerman, Maggie (2013). "Kin selection, pedagogy and linguistic complexity: whence protolanguage?". In Botha, Rudolf P.; Everaert, Martin (eds.). The evolutionary emergence of language: evidence and inference. Oxford University Press. pp. 77–96. ISBN 978-0-19-965485-7.
  51. Trivers, R. L. (1971). "The evolution of reciprocal altruism". Quarterly Review of Biology. 46: 35–57. doi:10.1086/406755. S2CID 19027999.
  52. Dessalles, Jean L. (1998). "Altruism, status and the origin of relevance". In James R. Hurford; Michael Studdert-Kennedy; Chris Knight (eds.). Approaches to the evolution of language: social and cognitive base. Cambridge University Press. pp. 130–147. ISBN 978-0-521-63964-4.
  53. Dunbar, R. I. M. (1996). Grooming, gossip and the evolution of language. London: Faber & Faber. ISBN 978-0-571-17396-9.
  54. von Heiseler, Till Nikolaus (2014). "Language evolved for storytelling in a super-fast evolution". In Cartmill, R. L. C. (ed.). Evolution of Language. London: World Scientific. pp. 114–121.
  55. Power, C. (1998). "Old wives' tales: the gossip hypothesis and the reliability of cheap signals". In Hurford, J. R.; Studdert-Kennedy, M.; Knight, C. (eds.). Approaches to the Evolution of Language: Social and Cognitive Bases. Cambridge University Press. pp. 111–129.
  56. Rappaport, R. A. 1999. "Ritual and Religion in the Making of Humanity." Cambridge University Press.
  57. Knight, C. 1998. Ritual/speech coevolution: a solution to the problem of deception. In J. R. Hurford, M. Studdert-Kennedy and C. Knight (eds), Approaches to the Evolution of Language: Social and cognitive bases. Cambridge University Press, pp. 68–91.
  58. Lewis, J. 2009. "As well as words: Congo Pygmy hunting, mimicry, and play." In R. Botha and C. Knight (eds), The Cradle of Language. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 236–256.
  59. Enfield, N. J. (2010). "Without social context?" (PDF). Science. 329 (5999): 1600–1601. Bibcode:2010Sci...329.1600E. doi:10.1126/science.1194229. hdl:11858/00-001M-0000-0012-C777-5. S2CID 143530707.
  60. Power, C. 1998. "Old wives' tales: the gossip hypothesis and the reliability of cheap signals." In J. R. Hurford, M. Studdert Kennedy and C. Knight (eds), Approaches to the Evolution of Language: Social and Cognitive Bases. Cambridge University Press, pp. 111 29.
  61. Watts, I. 2009. Red ochre, body painting, and language: interpreting the Blombos ochre. In R. Botha and C. Knight (eds), The Cradle of Language. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 62–92.
  62. Steels, Luc. 2009. "Is sociality a crucial prerequisite for the emergence of language?" In Rudolf P. Botha and Chris Knight (eds), The prehistory of language. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-954587-2
  63. Deacon, Terrence William (1997). The symbolic species: the co-evolution of language and the brain. New York: W. W. Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-03838-5.
  64. Boeckx, C. (2023) What made us "hunter-gatherers of words". Front. Neurosci. 17:1080861. doi:10.3389/fnins.2023.1080861.
  65. Knight, C. 2010. The origins of symbolic culture. In Ulrich J. Frey, Charlotte Störmer and Kai P. Willfuhr (eds) 2010. Homo Novus – A Human Without Illusions. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag, pp. 193–211.
  66. Rappaport, Roy A. (1979). Ecology, Meaning, and Religion. Richmond, CA: North Atlantic. pp. 201–211. ISBN 978-0-913028-54-4.
  67. Zahavi, A. 1993. "The fallacy of conventional signalling." Philosophical Transactions: Biological Sciences 340: 227–230, published by Royal Society.
  68. Searle, J. R. 1996. The Construction of Social Reality. London: Penguin.
  69. Durkheim, E. 1947 [1915]. "Origins of these beliefs". Chapter VII. In É. Durkheim, The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life: A study in religious sociology. Trans. J. W. Swain. Glencoe, Illinois: The Free Press, pp. 205–239.
  70. Knight, C. 2010. The origins of symbolic culture. In Ulrich J. Frey, Charlotte Störmer and Kai P. Willfuhr (eds) 2010. Homo Novus – A Human Without Illusions. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag, pp. 193–211.
  71. Searle, J. R. 1996. "The Construction of Social Reality." London: Penguin.
  72. Chomsky, Noam (2011). "Language and Other Cognitive Systems. What is Special About Language?". Language Learning and Development. 7 (4): 263–278. doi:10.1080/15475441.2011.584041. S2CID 122866773.
  73. Chomsky, N. 2005. 'Three factors in language design.' Linguistic Inquiry 36(1): 1–22.
  74. Uomini, Natalie Thaïs; Meyer, Georg Friedrich (30 August 2013). Petraglia, Michael D. (ed.). "Shared Brain Lateralization Patterns in Language and Acheulean Stone Tool Production: A Functional Transcranial Doppler Ultrasound Study". PLOS ONE. 8 (8): e72693. Bibcode:2013PLoSO...872693U. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0072693. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 3758346. PMID 24023634.
  75. Stout, Dietrich; Chaminade, Thierry (12 January 2012). "Stone tools, language and the brain in human evolution". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 367 (1585): 75–87. doi:10.1098/rstb.2011.0099. PMC 3223784. PMID 22106428.
  76. Putt, Shelby S. J.; Anwarzai, Zara; Holden, Chloe; Ruck, Lana; Schoenemann, P. Thomas (4 January 2022). "The evolution of combinatoriality and compositionality in hominid tool use: a comparative perspective". International Journal of Primatology. 45 (3): 589–634. doi:10.1007/s10764-021-00267-7. ISSN 1573-8604. S2CID 245654206.
  77. Barham, Lawrence; Everett, Daniel (June 2021). "Semiotics and the Origin of Language in the Lower Palaeolithic". Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. 28 (2): 535–579. doi:10.1007/s10816-020-09480-9. ISSN 1072-5369. S2CID 225509049.
  78. Arnauld, Antoine; Lancelot, Claude (1975) [1660]. General and Rational Grammar: The Port-Royal Grammar. The Hague: Mouton. ISBN 902793004X.
  79. (1987). "On Prague school functionalism in linguistics". In Dirven, R.; Fried, V. (eds.). Functionalism in Linguistics. John Benjamins. pp. 3–38. ISBN 9789027215246.
  80. Aronoff, Mark (2017). "Darwinism tested by the science of language". In Bowern; Horn; Zanuttini (eds.). On Looking into Words (and Beyond): Structures, Relations, Analyses. SUNY Press. pp. 443–456. ISBN 978-3-946234-92-0. Retrieved 3 March 2020.
  81. de Saussure, Ferdinand (1959) [1916]. Course in general linguistics (PDF). New York: Philosophy Library. ISBN 978-0-231-15727-8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 August 2019. Retrieved 6 May 2020.
  82. Lévi-Strauss, Claude (1987). Introduction to the work of Marcel Mauss. Routledge. pp. 59–60. ISBN 0-7100-9066-8.
  83. Hejl, P. M. (2013). "The importance of the concepts of 'organism' and 'evolution' in Emile Durkheim's division of social labor and the influence of Herbert Spencer". In Maasen, Sabine; Mendelsohn, E.; Weingart, P. (eds.). Biology as Society, Society as Biology: Metaphors. Springer. pp. 155–191. ISBN 9789401106733.
  84. Chomsky, N. (2004). Language and Mind: Current thoughts on ancient problems. Part I & Part II. In Lyle Jenkins (ed.), Variation and Universals in Biolinguistics. Amsterdam: Elsevier, pp. 379–405.
  85. Chomsky, N. (2005). "Three factors in language design". Linguistic Inquiry. 36 (1): 1–22. doi:10.1162/0024389052993655. S2CID 14954986.
  86. Berwick, Robert; Chomsky, Noam (2016). Why Only Us: Language and Evolution. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-03424-1.
  87. de Boer, Bart; Thompson, Bill; Ravignani, Andrea; Boeckx, Cedric (16 January 2020). "Evolutionary Dynamics Do Not Motivate a Single-Mutant Theory of Human Language". Scientific Reports. 10 (1): 451. Bibcode:2020NatSR..10..451D. doi:10.1038/s41598-019-57235-8. ISSN 2045-2322. PMC 6965110. PMID 31949223.
  88. Martins, Pedro Tiago; Boeckx, Cedric (27 November 2019). "Language evolution and complexity considerations: The no half-Merge fallacy". PLOS Biology. 17 (11): e3000389. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.3000389. ISSN 1545-7885. PMC 6880980. PMID 31774810.
  89. Carnie, Andrew (2012). Syntax: A Generative Introduction (3rd ed.). West Sussex: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 20–21. ISBN 978-0-470-65531-3.
  90. Dediu, Dan; Levinson, Stephen C. (2013). "On the antiquity of language: the reinterpretation of Neandertal linguistic capacities and its consequences". Frontiers in Psychology. 4: 397. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00397. ISSN 1664-1078. PMC 3701805. PMID 23847571.
  91. Vyshedskiy, Andrey (29 July 2019). "Language evolution to revolution: the leap from rich-vocabulary non-recursive communication system to recursive language 70,000 years ago was associated with acquisition of a novel component of imagination, called Prefrontal Synthesis, enabled by a mutation that slowed down the prefrontal cortex maturation simultaneously in two or more children – the Romulus and Remus hypothesis". Research Ideas and Outcomes. 5. doi:10.3897/rio.5.e38546. ISSN 2367-7163.
  92. Bakker, Peter (July 1987). "Autonomous Languages of Twins". Acta Geneticae Medicae et Gemellologiae: Twin Research. 36 (2): 233–238. doi:10.1017/S0001566000004463. ISSN 0001-5660. PMID 3434134.
  93. Amos W.; Hoffman J. I. (7 January 2010). "Evidence that two main bottleneck events shaped modern human genetic diversity". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 277 (1678): 131–137. doi:10.1098/rspb.2009.1473. PMC 2842629. PMID 19812086.
  94. Premack, David & Premack, Ann James. The Mind of an Ape, ISBN 0-393-01581-5.
  95. Pollick, A. S.; de Waal, F. B. (May 2007). "Ape Gestures and Language Evolution". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 104 (19): 8184–8189. Bibcode:2007PNAS..104.8184P. doi:10.1073/pnas.0702624104. PMC 1876592. PMID 17470779.
  96. Kimura, Doreen (1993). Neuromotor mechanisms in human communication. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-505492-7.
  97. Newman, A. J.; et al. (2002). "A Critical Period for Right Hemisphere Recruitment in American Sign Language Processing". Nature Neuroscience. 5 (1): 76–80. doi:10.1038/nn775. PMID 11753419. S2CID 2745545.
  98. Arbib, M. A.; Liebal, K; Pika, S. (December 2008). "Primate vocalization, gesture, and the evolution of human language". Current Anthropology. 49 (6): 1053–1076. doi:10.1086/593015. PMID 19391445. S2CID 18832100.
  99. Capone, Nina C.; McGregor, Karla K. (2004). "Gesture Development". Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research. 47 (1): 173–186. doi:10.1044/1092-4388(2004/015). PMID 15072537. S2CID 7244799.
  100. Ozçalişkan, S.; Goldin-Meadow, S. (July 2005). "Gesture is at the cutting edge of early language development". Cognition. 96 (3): B101 – B113. doi:10.1016/j.cognition.2005.01.001. PMID 15996556. S2CID 206863317.
  101. Rizzolatti, G. (2008). Giacomo Rizzolatti on the Evolution of Language. Retrieved from http://gocognitive.net/interviews/evolution-language-gestures[full citation needed]
  102. Kendon, Adam (February 2017). "Reflections on the "gesture-first" hypothesis of language origins". Psychonomic Bulletin & Review. 24 (1): 163–170. doi:10.3758/s13423-016-1117-3. PMC 5325861. PMID 27439503.
  103. Corballis, Michael C. (2002). Wray, Alison (ed.). The transition to language. Oxford University Press. pp. 161–179. ISBN 978-0-19-925066-0.
  104. Knight, Chris (2006). "Language co-evolved with the rule of law". In Cangelosi, Angelo; Smith, Andrew D. M.; Smith, Kenny (eds.). The evolution of language: proceedings of the 6th international conference (EVOLANG6), Rome, Italy, 12–15 April 200 (PDF). Vol. 7. New Jersey: World Scientific. pp. 109–128. doi:10.1007/s11299-007-0039-1. ISBN 9789812566560. S2CID 143877486. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  105. Knight, Chris (2000). "Play as precursor of phonology and syntax". In Chris Knight; Michael Studdert-Kennedy; James R. Hurford (eds.). The Evolutionary emergence of language: social function and the origins of linguistic for. Cambridge University Press. pp. 99–1119. ISBN 978-0-521-78157-2.
  106. Kolb, Bryan & Ian Q. Whishaw (2003). Fundamentals of Human Neuropsychology (5th ed.). Worth Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7167-5300-1.
  107. Sandler, Wendy; & Lillo-Martin, Diane. (2006). Sign Language and Linguistic Universals. Cambridge University Press.
  108. Meena, Ram Lakhan (2021). Current Trends of Applied Linguistics. K. K. Publications. p. 48.
  109. Hewes, Gordon W.; Andrew, R. J.; Carini, Louis; Choe, Hackeny; Gardner, R. Allen; Kortlandt, A.; Krantz, Grover S.; McBride, Glen; Nottebohm, Fernando; Pfeiffer, John; Rumbaugh, Duane G.; Steklis, Horst D.; Raliegh, Michael J.; Stopa, Roman; Suzuki, Akira; Washburn, S. L.; Wescott, Roger W. (1973). "Primate Communication and the Gestural Origin of Language [and Comments and Reply]". Current Anthropology. 14 (1/2): 5–24. doi:10.1086/201401. JSTOR 2741093. S2CID 146288708.
  110. McNeill, David; Bertenthal, Bennett; Cole, Jonathan; Gallagher, Shaun (April 2005). "Gesture-first, but no gestures?". Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 28 (2): 138–139. doi:10.1017/S0140525X05360031. S2CID 51753637.
  111. Larsson, M (2015). "Tool-use-associated sound in the evolution of language". Animal Cognition. 18 (5): 993–1005. doi:10.1007/s10071-015-0885-x. PMID 26118672. S2CID 18714154.
  112. Larsson, M (2014). "Self-generated sounds of locomotion and ventilation and the evolution of human rhythmic abilities". Animal Cognition. 17 (1): 1–14. doi:10.1007/s10071-013-0678-z. PMC 3889703. PMID 23990063.
  113. Skoyles, John R., Gesture, Language Origins, and Right Handedness, Psychology: 11,#24, 2000
  114. Petrides, M.; Cadoret, G.; Mackey, S. (June 2005). "Orofacial somatomotor responses in the macaque monkey homologue of Broca's area". Nature. 435 (7046): 1235–1238. Bibcode:2005Natur.435.1235P. doi:10.1038/nature03628. PMID 15988526. S2CID 4397762.
  115. Porter, R. J.; Lubker, J. F. (September 1980). "Rapid reproduction of vowel-vowel sequences: evidence for a fast and direct acoustic-motoric linkage in speech". Journal of Speech and Hearing Research. 23 (3): 593–602. doi:10.1044/jshr.2303.593. PMID 7421161.
  116. McCarthy, R.; Warrington, E. K. (June 1984). "A two-route model of speech production. Evidence from aphasia". Brain. 107 (2): 463–485. doi:10.1093/brain/107.2.463. PMID 6722512.
  117. McCarthy, R. A.; Warrington, E. K. (2001). "Repeating without semantics: surface dysphasia?". Neurocase. 7 (1): 77–87. doi:10.1093/neucas/7.1.77. PMID 11239078. S2CID 12988855.
  118. Marslen-Wilson, W. (1973). "Linguistic structure and speech shadowing at very short latencies". Nature. 244 (5417): 522–523. Bibcode:1973Natur.244..522M. doi:10.1038/244522a0. PMID 4621131. S2CID 4220775.
  119. Fay, W. H.; Coleman, R. O. (July 1977). "A human sound transducer/reproducer: temporal capabilities of a profoundly echolalic child". Brain and Language. 4 (3): 396–402. doi:10.1016/0093-934x(77)90034-7. PMID 907878. S2CID 29492873.
  120. Schippers, M. B.; Roebroeck, A; Renken, R.; Nanetti, L.; Keysers, C. (2010). "Mapping the Information flow from one brain to another during gestural communication". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 107 (20): 9388–9393. Bibcode:2010PNAS..107.9388S. doi:10.1073/pnas.1001791107. PMC 2889063. PMID 20439736.
  121. Moro, Andrea (2008). The boundaries of Babel: the brain and the enigma of impossible language. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-13498-9.[page needed]
  122. Falk, D. (August 2004). "Prelinguistic evolution in early hominins: whence motherese?" (PDF). Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 27 (4): 491–583. doi:10.1017/s0140525x04000111. PMID 15773427. S2CID 39547572. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 January 2014. Retrieved 4 January 2014.
  123. Kaye, K. (1982). The Mental and Social Life of Babies. University of Chicago Press. pp. 186. ISBN 0-226-42848-6.
  124. Poliva, Oren (20 September 2017). "From where to what: a neuroanatomically based evolutionary model of the emergence of speech in humans". F1000Research. 4: 67. doi:10.12688/f1000research.6175.3. ISSN 2046-1402. PMC 5600004. PMID 28928931.
  125. Poliva, Oren (30 June 2016). "From Mimicry to Language: A Neuroanatomically Based Evolutionary Model of the Emergence of Vocal Language". Frontiers in Neuroscience. 10: 307. doi:10.3389/fnins.2016.00307. ISSN 1662-453X. PMC 4928493. PMID 27445676.
  126. Scott, S. K. (1 December 2000). "Identification of a pathway for intelligible speech in the left temporal lobe". Brain. 123 (12): 2400–2406. doi:10.1093/brain/123.12.2400. ISSN 1460-2156. PMC 5630088. PMID 11099443.
  127. Davis, Matthew H.; Johnsrude, Ingrid S. (15 April 2003). "Hierarchical Processing in Spoken Language Comprehension". The Journal of Neuroscience. 23 (8): 3423–3431. doi:10.1523/jneurosci.23-08-03423.2003. ISSN 0270-6474. PMC 6742313. PMID 12716950.
  128. Petkov, Christopher I.; Kayser, Christoph; Steudel, Thomas; Whittingstall, Kevin; Augath, Mark; Logothetis, Nikos K. (10 February 2008). "A voice region in the monkey brain". Nature Neuroscience. 11 (3): 367–374. doi:10.1038/nn2043. ISSN 1097-6256. PMID 18264095. S2CID 5505773.
  129. Buchsbaum, Bradley R.; Baldo, Juliana; Okada, Kayoko; Berman, Karen F.; Dronkers, Nina; D'Esposito, Mark; Hickok, Gregory (December 2011). "Conduction aphasia, sensory-motor integration, and phonological short-term memory – An aggregate analysis of lesion and fMRI data". Brain and Language. 119 (3): 119–128. doi:10.1016/j.bandl.2010.12.001. ISSN 0093-934X. PMC 3090694. PMID 21256582.
  130. Warren, Jane E.; Wise, Richard J.S.; Warren, Jason D. (December 2005). "Sounds do-able: auditory–motor transformations and the posterior temporal plane". Trends in Neurosciences. 28 (12): 636–643. doi:10.1016/j.tins.2005.09.010. ISSN 0166-2236. PMID 16216346. S2CID 36678139.
  131. Campbell, Ruth (12 March 2008). "The processing of audio-visual speech: empirical and neural bases". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences. 363 (1493): 1001–1010. doi:10.1098/rstb.2007.2155. ISSN 0962-8436. PMC 2606792. PMID 17827105.
  132. Kayser, Christoph; Petkov, Christopher I.; Logothetis, Nikos K. (December 2009). "Multisensory interactions in primate auditory cortex: fMRI and electrophysiology". Hearing Research. 258 (1–2): 80–88. doi:10.1016/j.heares.2009.02.011. ISSN 0378-5955. PMID 19269312. S2CID 31412246.
  133. Hickok, Gregory; Buchsbaum, Bradley; Humphries, Colin; Muftuler, Tugan (1 July 2003). "Auditory–Motor Interaction Revealed by fMRI: Speech, Music, and Working Memory in Area Spt". Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience. 15 (5): 673–682. doi:10.1162/089892903322307393. ISSN 1530-8898. PMID 12965041.
  134. Schwartz, M. F.; Faseyitan, O.; Kim, J.; Coslett, H. B. (20 November 2012). "The dorsal stream contribution to phonological retrieval in object naming". Brain. 135 (12): 3799–3814. doi:10.1093/brain/aws300. ISSN 0006-8950. PMC 3525060. PMID 23171662.
  135. Gow, David W. (June 2012). "The cortical organization of lexical knowledge: A dual lexicon model of spoken language processing". Brain and Language. 121 (3): 273–288. doi:10.1016/j.bandl.2012.03.005. ISSN 0093-934X. PMC 3348354. PMID 22498237.
  136. Buchsbaum, Bradley R.; D'Esposito, Mark (May 2008). "The Search for the Phonological Store: From Loop to Convolution". Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience. 20 (5): 762–778. doi:10.1162/jocn.2008.20501. ISSN 0898-929X. PMID 18201133. S2CID 17878480.
  137. Lachaux, Jean-Philippe; Jerbi, Karim; Bertrand, Olivier; Minotti, Lorella; Hoffmann, Dominique; Schoendorff, Benjamin; Kahane, Philippe (31 October 2007). "A Blueprint for Real-Time Functional Mapping via Human Intracranial Recordings". PLOS ONE. 2 (10): e1094. Bibcode:2007PLoSO...2.1094L. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0001094. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 2040217. PMID 17971857.
  138. Jardri, Renaud; Houfflin-Debarge, Véronique; Delion, Pierre; Pruvo, Jean-Pierre; Thomas, Pierre; Pins, Delphine (April 2012). "Assessing fetal response to maternal speech using a noninvasive functional brain imaging technique". International Journal of Developmental Neuroscience. 30 (2): 159–161. doi:10.1016/j.ijdevneu.2011.11.002. ISSN 0736-5748. PMID 22123457. S2CID 2603226.
  139. Petersen, M.; Beecher, M.; Zoloth; Moody, D.; Stebbins, W. (20 October 1978). "Neural lateralization of species-specific vocalizations by Japanese macaques (Macaca fuscata)". Science. 202 (4365): 324–327. Bibcode:1978Sci...202..324P. doi:10.1126/science.99817. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 99817.
  140. Heffner, H.; Heffner, R. (5 October 1984). "Temporal lobe lesions and perception of species-specific vocalizations by macaques". Science. 226 (4670): 75–76. Bibcode:1984Sci...226...75H. doi:10.1126/science.6474192. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 6474192.
  141. Shu, W.; Cho, J. Y.; Jiang, Y.; Zhang, M.; Weisz, D.; Elder, G. A.; Schmeidler, J.; De Gasperi, R.; Sosa, M. A. G. (27 June 2005). "Altered ultrasonic vocalization in mice with a disruption in the Foxp2 gene". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 102 (27): 9643–9648. Bibcode:2005PNAS..102.9643S. doi:10.1073/pnas.0503739102. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 1160518. PMID 15983371.
  142. Sia, G. M.; Clem, R. L.; Huganir, R. L. (31 October 2013). "The Human Language-Associated Gene SRPX2 Regulates Synapse Formation and Vocalization in Mice". Science. 342 (6161): 987–991. Bibcode:2013Sci...342..987S. doi:10.1126/science.1245079. ISSN 0036-8075. PMC 3903157. PMID 24179158.
  143. Sperber, D. and D. Wilson 1986. Relevance. Communication and cognition. Oxford: Blackwell.
  144. Deutscher, Guy (2005). The unfolding of language: an evolutionary tour of mankind's greatest invention. New York: Metropolitan. ISBN 978-0-8050-7907-4.
  145. Hopper, P. J. 1998. Emergent grammar. In M. Tomasello (ed.), The New Psychology of Language. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum, 155–175.
  146. Heine, Bernd; Kuteva, Tania (2007). The genesis of grammar : a reconstructio. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-922777-8.
  147. Lakoff, G. and M. Johnson 1980. Metaphors We Live By. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  148. Heine, Bernd; Kuteva, Tania (2012). "Grammaticalization theory as a tool for reconstructing language evolution". In Maggie Tallerman; Kathleen R. Gibson (eds.). The Oxford handbook of language evolution. Oxford University Press. pp. 512–527. ISBN 978-0-19-954111-9.
  149. Cheney, Dorothy L.; Seyfarth, Robert M. (2005). "Constraints and preadaptations in the earliest stages of language evolution" (PDF). The Linguistic Review. 22 (2–4): 135–159. doi:10.1515/tlir.2005.22.2-4.135. S2CID 18939193.
  150. Maynard Smith, John; Harper, David (2003). Animal signals. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-852684-1.
  151. Davidson, R. D. 1979. What metaphors mean. In S. Sacks (ed.), On Metaphor. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, pp. 29–45.
  152. Lakoff, G. and R. Núñez 2000. Where mathematics comes from. New York: Basic Books.
  153. Gallup, G. G. Jr. (1970). "Chimpanzees: Self recognition". Science. 167 (3914): 86–87. Bibcode:1970Sci...167...86G. doi:10.1126/science.167.3914.86. PMID 4982211. S2CID 145295899.
  154. Mitchell, R. W. (1995). "Evidence of dolphin self-recognition and the difficulties of interpretation". Consciousness and Cognition. 4 (2): 229–234. doi:10.1006/ccog.1995.1029. PMID 8521261. S2CID 45507064.
  155. Ko, Kwang Hyun (2016). "Origins of human intelligence: The chain of tool-making and brain evolution" (PDF). Anthropological Notebooks. 22 (1): 5–22.
  156. Soma, M.; Hiraiwa-Hasegawa, M.; Okanoya, K. (2009). "Early ontogenetic effects on song quality in the Bengalese finch (Lonchura striata var. domestica): laying order, sibling competition and song syntax". Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. 63 (3): 363–370. Bibcode:2009BEcoS..63..363S. doi:10.1007/s00265-008-0670-9. S2CID 23137306.
  157. Ritchie, Graham; Kirby, Simon (2005). "Selection, domestication, and the emergence of learned communication systems" (PDF). Second International Symposium on the Emergence and Evolution of Linguistic Communication. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 January 2012.
  158. MacNeilage, P. 1998. Evolution of the mechanism of language output: comparative neurobiology of vocal and manual communication. In J. R. Hurford, M. Studdert Kennedy and C. Knight (eds), Approaches to the Evolution of Language. Cambridge University Press, pp. 222 41[clarify].
  159. Hauser, M. D.; Chomsky, N.; Fitch, W. T. (November 2002). "The faculty of language: what is it, who has it, and how did it evolve?" (PDF). Science. 298 (5598): 1569–1579. doi:10.1126/science.298.5598.1569. PMID 12446899. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 December 2013.
  160. Everett, Daniel L. (2005). "Cultural Constraints on Grammar and Cognition in Piraha Another Look at the Design Features of Human Language" (PDF). Current Anthropology. 46 (4): 621–646. doi:10.1086/431525. hdl:2066/41103. S2CID 2223235.
  161. Zhordania, I. M. (2006). Who asked the first question : the origins of human choral singing, intelligence, language and speech. Tbilisi, Georgia: Logos Tbilisi Ivane Javakhishvili State University. ISBN 9789994031818.
  162. Savage-Rumbaugh, E. Sue; Murphy, Jeannine; Sevcik, Rose A.; Brakke, Karen E.; Williams, Shelly L.; Rumbaugh, Duane M.; Bates, Elizabeth (1993). "Language Comprehension in Ape and Child". Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development. 58 (3/4): i–252. doi:10.2307/1166068. JSTOR 1166068. PMID 8366872.
  163. Bolinger, Dwight L. (Editor) 1972. Intonation. Selected Readings. Harmondsworth: Penguin, p. 314.
  164. Cruttenden, Alan (1986). Intonation. Cambridge University Press. pp. 169–174. ISBN 978-0-521-26028-2.
  165. Lee, Hye-Sook 2008. Non-rising questions in North Keyonsang Korean. in Proc. Speech Prosody 2008. p. 241. Retrieved 26. August 2024.
  166. Tomasello, Michael; Call, Josep; Hare, Brian (April 2003). "Chimpanzees understand psychological states – the question is which ones and to what extent". Trends in Cognitive Sciences. 7 (4): 153–156. doi:10.1016/S1364-6613(03)00035-4. PMID 12691762. S2CID 3390980.
  167. Hale, Courtney Melinda; Tager-Flusberg, Helen (June 2003). "The influence of language on theory of mind: a training study". Developmental Science. 6 (3): 346–359. doi:10.1111/1467-7687.00289. PMC 1350918. PMID 16467908.
  168. Matsuzawa, Tetsuro (1985). "Use of numbers by a chimpanzee". Nature. 315 (6014): 57–59. Bibcode:1985Natur.315...57M. doi:10.1038/315057a0. PMID 3990808. S2CID 4361089.
  169. Cheung, Pierina; Rubenson, Miriam; Barner, David (February 2017). "To infinity and beyond: Children generalize the successor function to all possible numbers years after learning to count". Cognitive Psychology. 92: 22–36. doi:10.1016/j.cogpsych.2016.11.002. PMID 27889550. S2CID 206867905 – via Science Direct.
  170. Carey, Susan (2001). "Cognitive Foundations of Arithmetic: Evolution and Ontogenisis" (PDF). Mind and Language. 16 (1): 37–55. doi:10.1111/1468-0017.00155. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 July 2013. Retrieved 13 January 2014.
  171. Hockett, Charles F. (1960). "The Origin of Speech" (PDF). Scientific American. 203 (3): 88–96. Bibcode:1960SciAm.203c..88H. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0960-88. PMID 14402211. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 January 2014. Retrieved 6 January 2014.
  172. Schlenker, Philippe; Chemla, Emmanuel; Arnold, Kate; Lemasson, Alban; Ouattara, Karim; Keenan, Sumir; Stephan, Claudia; Ryder, Robin; Zuberbühler, Klaus (December 2014). "Monkey semantics: two 'dialects' of Campbell's monkey alarm calls". Linguistics and Philosophy. 37 (6): 439–501. doi:10.1007/s10988-014-9155-7. S2CID 3428900.
  173. Diamond, Jared M. (1992). "Bridges to human language". The third chimpanzee : the evolution and future of the human animal. New York: HarperCollins. pp. 141–167. ISBN 978-0-06-018307-3.
  174. Savage-Rumbaugh, E. Sue; Lewin, Roger. (1994). Kanzi: the ape at the brink of the human mind. New York: Wiley. ISBN 978-0-471-58591-6.
  175. Savage-Rumbaugh, E. Sue; Shanker, Stuart.; Taylor, Talbot J. (1998). Apes, language, and the human mind. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-510986-3.
  176. Freeman, Scott; Jon C. Herron., Evolutionary Analysis (4th ed.), Pearson Education, Inc. (2007), ISBN 0-13-227584-8 pages 789–90
  177. Seyfarth, Robert M.; Cheney, Dorothy L.; Marler, Peter (1980). "Vervet monkey alarm calls: Semantic communication in a free-ranging primate". Animal Behaviour. 28 (4): 1070–1094. doi:10.1016/S0003-3472(80)80097-2. S2CID 53165940.
  178. Arnold, Kate; Zuberbühler, Klaus (2006). "Language evolution: Semantic combinations in primate calls". Nature. 441 (7091): 303. Bibcode:2006Natur.441..303A. doi:10.1038/441303a. PMID 16710411. S2CID 4413635.
  179. Wade, Nicholas (23 May 2006). "Nigerian Monkeys Drop Hints on Language Origin". The New York Times. Retrieved 9 September 2007.
  180. Gibbons, Christopher M. (2007). The referentiality of chimpanzee vocal signaling: behavioral and acoustic analysis of food barks (Thesis). Ohio State University.
  181. Slocombe, Katie E.; Zuberbühler, Klaus (2005). "Functionally Referential Communication in a Chimpanzee" (PDF). Current Biology. 15 (19): 1779–1784. Bibcode:2005CBio...15.1779S. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2005.08.068. PMID 16213827. S2CID 6774592.
  182. Clark, Gary; Henneberg, Maciej (2017). "Ardipithecus ramidus and the evolution of language and singing: An early origin for hominin vocal capability". HOMO. 68 (2): 101–121. doi:10.1016/j.jchb.2017.03.001. PMID 28363458.
  183. Aronoff, Mark; Rees-Miller, Janie. (2001). The handbook of linguistics. Malden, MA: Blackwell. ISBN 0-631-20497-0.
  184. Fitch, W. Tecumseh (2000). "The evolution of speech: a comparative review". Trends in Cognitive Sciences. 4 (7): 258–267. doi:10.1016/S1364-6613(00)01494-7. PMID 10859570. S2CID 14706592.
  185. Ohala, John J. (10 September 1987). "Experimental Phonology". Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society. 13: 207. doi:10.3765/bls.v13i0.1803. ISSN 2377-1666.
  186. Cataldo, D. M.; Migliano, A. B.; Vinicius, L. (19 January 2018). "Speech, stone tool-making and the evolution of language". PLOS ONE. 13 (1): e0191071. Bibcode:2018PLoSO..1391071C. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0191071. PMC 5774752. PMID 29351319.
  187. Mithen, Steven J. (2006). The singing neanderthals: the origins of music, language, mind, and body. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-02192-1.
  188. Barham, Lawrence; Everett, Daniel (1 June 2021). "Semiotics and the Origin of Language in the Lower Palaeolithic". Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. 28 (2): 535–579. doi:10.1007/s10816-020-09480-9. ISSN 1573-7764. S2CID 225509049.
  189. Vicari, Giuseppe; Adenzato, Mauro (May 2014). "Is recursion language-specific? Evidence of recursive mechanisms in the structure of intentional action". Consciousness and Cognition. 26: 169–188. doi:10.1016/j.concog.2014.03.010. hdl:2318/154505. PMID 24762973. S2CID 206955548.
  190. Corballis, Michael (2007). "The Uniqueness of Human Recursive Thinking". American Scientist. 95 (3): 240. doi:10.1511/2007.65.240. ISSN 0003-0996.
  191. Everett, Daniel L. (August 2005). "Cultural Constraints on Grammar and Cognition in Pirahã: Another Look at the Design Features of Human Language". Current Anthropology. 46 (4): 621–646. doi:10.1086/431525. hdl:2066/41103. ISSN 0011-3204. S2CID 2223235.
  192. Arensburg, B.; Schepartz, L. A.; Tillier, A. M.; Vandermeersch, B.; Rak, Y. (October 1990). "A reappraisal of the anatomical basis for speech in Middle Palaeolithic hominids". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 83 (2): 137–146. doi:10.1002/ajpa.1330830202. PMID 2248373.
  193. D'Anastasio, R.; Wroe, S.; Tuniz, C.; Mancini, L.; Cesana, D. T.; Dreossi, D.; Ravichandiran, M.; Attard, M.; et al. (2013). "Micro-biomechanics of the kebara 2 hyoid and its implications for speech in neanderthals". PLOS ONE. 8 (12): e82261. Bibcode:2013PLoSO...882261D. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0082261. PMC 3867335. PMID 24367509.
  194. Jungers, W. L.; Pokempner, A. A.; Kay, R. F.; Cartmill, M. (August 2003). "Hypoglossal canal size in living hominoids and the evolution of human speech" (PDF). Human Biology. 75 (4): 473–484. doi:10.1353/hub.2003.0057. PMID 14655872. S2CID 30777048. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 June 2007.
  195. DeGusta, D.; Gilbert, W. H.; Turner, S. P. (February 1999). "Hypoglossal canal size and hominid speech". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 96 (4): 1800–1804. Bibcode:1999PNAS...96.1800D. doi:10.1073/pnas.96.4.1800. PMC 15600. PMID 9990105.
  196. Johansson, Sverker (April 2006). "Constraining the Time when Language Evolved" (PDF). Evolution of Language: Sixth International Conference, Rome. pp. 152–159. doi:10.1142/9789812774262_0020. ISBN 9789812566560. Archived from the original on 15 October 2006. Retrieved 10 September 2007.
  197. Houghton, P. (February 1993). "Neandertal supralaryngeal vocal tract". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 90 (2): 139–146. doi:10.1002/ajpa.1330900202. PMID 8430750.
  198. Boë, Louis-Jean; Maeda, Shinji; Heim, Jean-Louis (1999). "Neandertal man was not morphologically handicapped for speech". Evolution of Communication. 3 (1): 49–77. doi:10.1075/eoc.3.1.05boe.
  199. de Boer, Bart (2017). "Evolution of speech and evolution of language". Psychonomic Bulletin & Review. 24 (1): 158–162. doi:10.3758/s13423-016-1130-6. ISSN 1069-9384.
  200. Klarreich, E. (2004). "Biography of Richard G. Klein". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 101 (16): 5705–5707. Bibcode:2004PNAS..101.5705K. doi:10.1073/pnas.0402190101. PMC 395972. PMID 15079069.
  201. Klein, Richard G. "Three Distinct Human Populations". Biological and Behavioral Origins of Modern Humans. Access Excellence @ The National Health Museum. Retrieved 10 September 2007.
  202. Marwick, Ben (2003). "Pleistocene Exchange Networks as Evidence for the Evolution of Language". Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 13: 67–81. doi:10.1017/S0959774303000040. hdl:1885/42089. S2CID 15514627.
  203. Conde-Valverde, Mercedes; Martínez, Ignacio; Quam, Rolf M.; Rosa, Manuel; Velez, Alex D.; Lorenzo, Carlos; Jarabo, Pilar; Bermúdez de Castro, José María; Carbonell, Eudald; Arsuaga, Juan Luis (1 March 2021). "Neanderthals and Homo sapiens had similar auditory and speech capacities". Nature Ecology & Evolution. 5 (5): 609–615. Bibcode:2021NatEE...5..609C. doi:10.1038/s41559-021-01391-6. ISSN 2397-334X. PMID 33649543. S2CID 232090739.
  204. Fleagle, John G.; Assefa, Zelalem; Brown, Francis H.; Shea, John J. (2008). "Paleoanthropology of the Kibish Formation, southern Ethiopia: Introduction". Journal of Human Evolution. 55 (3): 360–365. Bibcode:2008JHumE..55..360F. doi:10.1016/j.jhevol.2008.05.007. PMID 18617219.
  205. Henshilwood, C. S.; d'Errico, F.; Yates, R.; Jacobs, Z.; Tribolo, C.; Duller, G. A. T.; Mercier, N.; Sealy, J. C.; Valladas, H.; Watts, I.; Wintle, A. G. (2002). "Emergence of modern human behavior: Middle Stone Age engravings from South Africa". Science. 295 (5558): 1278–1280. Bibcode:2002Sci...295.1278H. doi:10.1126/science.1067575. PMID 11786608. S2CID 31169551.
  206. Minkel, J. R. (18 July 2007). "Skulls Add to "Out of Africa" Theory of Human Origins: Pattern of skull variation bolsters the case that humans took over from earlier species". Scientific American.com. Retrieved 9 September 2007.
  207. Chris Stringer, 2011. The Origin of Our Species. London: Penguin.
  208. Fitch, W. T. (2000). "The phonetic potential of nonhuman vocal tracts: comparative cineradiographic observations of vocalizing animals". Phonetica. 57 (2–4): 205–218. doi:10.1159/000028474. PMID 10992141. S2CID 202652500.
  209. Fitch, W. T.; Reby, D. (August 2001). "The descended larynx is not uniquely human". Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 268 (1477): 1669–1675. doi:10.1098/rspb.2001.1704. PMC 1088793. PMID 11506679.
  210. Weissengruber, G. E.; Forstenpointner, G.; Peters, G.; Kübber-Heiss, A.; Fitch, W. T. (September 2002). "Hyoid apparatus and pharynx in the lion (Panthera leo), jaguar (Panthera onca), tiger (Panthera tigris), cheetah (Acinonyxjubatus) and domestic cat (Felis silvestris f. catus)". Journal of Anatomy. 201 (3): 195–209. doi:10.1046/j.1469-7580.2002.00088.x. PMC 1570911. PMID 12363272.
  211. Lieberman, Philip (2007). "The Evolution of Human Speech: Its Anatomical and Neural Bases" (PDF). Current Anthropology. 48 (1): 39–66. doi:10.1086/509092. S2CID 28651524. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 June 2014. Retrieved 3 May 2009.
  212. Nishimura, T.; Mikami, A.; Suzuki, J.; Matsuzawa, T. (September 2006). "Descent of the hyoid in chimpanzees: evolution of face flattening and speech". Journal of Human Evolution. 51 (3): 244–254. Bibcode:2006JHumE..51..244N. doi:10.1016/j.jhevol.2006.03.005. PMID 16730049.
  213. Lieberman, Philip; McCarthy, Robert C.; Strait, David (2006). "The Recent Origin of Human Speech". The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 119 (5): 3441. Bibcode:2006ASAJ..119.3441L. doi:10.1121/1.4786937.
  214. M. Clegg 2001. The Comparative Anatomy and Evolution of the Human Vocal Tract Unpublished thesis, University of London.
  215. Perreault, C.; Mathew, S. (2012). "Dating the origin of language using phonemic diversity". PLOS ONE. 7 (4): e35289. Bibcode:2012PLoSO...735289P. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0035289. PMC 3338724. PMID 22558135.
  216. John J. Ohala, 2000. The irrelevance of the lowered larynx in modern Man for the development of speech. Paris, ENST: The Evolution of Language, pp. 171–172.
  217. Barel, Efrat; Tzischinsky, Orna (June 2018). "Age and Sex Differences in Verbal and Visuospatial Abilities". Advances in Cognitive Psychology. 2 (14): 51–61. doi:10.5709/acp-0238-x. PMC 7186802. PMID 32362962.
  218. Fitch, W. T. (2002). Comparative vocal production and the evolution of speech: Reinterpreting the descent of the larynx. In A. Wray (ed.), The Transition to Language. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 21–45.
  219. Atkinson, Quentin (2011). "Phonemic Diversity Supports a Serial Founder Effect Model of Language Expansion from Africa" (PDF). Science Magazine. 332 (6027): 346–349. Bibcode:2011Sci...332..346A. doi:10.1126/science.1199295. PMID 21493858. S2CID 42021647. Retrieved 9 July 2017.
  220. Cysouw, Michael; Dediu, Dan; Moran, Steven (10 February 2012). "Comment on "Phonemic Diversity Supports a Serial Founder Effect Model of Language Expansion from Africa"". Science. 335 (6069): 657. Bibcode:2012Sci...335..657C. doi:10.1126/science.1208841. hdl:11858/00-001M-0000-0012-1937-4. PMID 22323802.
  221. Wang, Chuan-Chao; Ding, Qi-Liang; Tao, Huan; Li, Hui (10 February 2012). "Comment on "Phonemic Diversity Supports a Serial Founder Effect Model of Language Expansion from Africa"". Science. 335 (6069): 657. Bibcode:2012Sci...335..657W. doi:10.1126/science.1207846. PMID 22323803. S2CID 31360222. Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  222. Pereltsvaig, Asya; Van Tuyl, Rory (10 February 2012). "Comment on "Phonemic Diversity Supports a Serial Founder Effect Model of Language Expansion from Africa"". Science. 335 (6069): 657. Bibcode:2012Sci...335..657V. doi:10.1126/science.1209176. PMID 22323804. Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  223. Turner, P. and Russell-Coulter, C. (2001) Dictionary of Ancient Deities (Oxford: OUP)
  224. Pennock, Robert T. (2000). Tower of Babel: The Evidence against the New Creationism. Bradford. ISBN 978-0-262-66165-2.
  225. Lindsay, Robert (1728). The history of Scotland: from 21 February 1436. to March, 1565. In which are contained accounts of many remarkable passages altogether differing from our other historians; and many facts are related, either concealed by some, or omitted by others. Baskett & Co. p. 104.
  226. Meena, Ram Lakhan (3 August 2021). Current Trends of Applied Linguistics. K.K. Publications. Retrieved 9 January 2022.

Further reading

  • Allott, Robin. (1989). The Motor Theory of Language Origin. Sussex, England: Book Guild. ISBN 978-0-86332-359-1.
  • Armstrong, David F.; Stokoe, William C.; Wilcox, Sherman E. (1995). Gesture and the Nature of Language. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-46772-8.
  • Botha, Rudolf P.; Everaert, Martin, eds. (2013). The Evolutionary Emergence of Language: Evidence and Inference. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-965484-0.
  • Botha, Rudolf P.; Knight, Chris (2009). The Prehistory of Language. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-954587-2.
  • Burling, Robbins (2005). The Talking Ape: How Language Evolved. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-927940-1.
  • Cangelosi, Angelo; Greco, Alberto; Harnad, Stevan (2002). "Symbol Grounding and the Symbolic Theft Hypothesis". In Cangelosi, Angelo; Parisi, Domenico (eds.). Simulating the Evolution of Language. London; New York: Springer. ISBN 978-1-85233-428-4.
  • Corballis, Michael C. (2002). From Hand to Mouth: The Origins of Language. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-08803-7.
  • Crystal, David (1997). The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Language. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-55967-6.
  • de Grolier, E. (ed.), 1983. The Origin and Evolution of Language. Paris: Harwood Academic Publishers.
  • Dessalles, J-L., 2007. Why We Talk: The Evolutionary Origins of Language. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199563463
  • Dor, Dan; Knight, Chris; Lewis, Jerome (2015). The Social Origins of Language. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-966533-4.
  • Dunbar, Robin Ian MacDonald; Knight, Chris; Power, Camilla (1999). The Evolution of Culture: An Interdisciplinary View. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-0-7486-1076-1.
  • Everett, Daniel L. (2017). How Language Began: The Story of Humanity's Greatest Invention. New York: Liveright. ISBN 978-0-87140-795-5.
  • Fitch, W. Tecumseh (2010). The Evolution of Language. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-67736-3.
  • Givón, Talmy; Malle, Bertram F (2002). The Evolution of Language out of Pre-Language. John Benjamins. ISBN 978-1-58811-237-8.
  • Harnad, Stevan R. (1976). Steklis, Horst D.; Lancaster, Jane (eds.). Origins and Evolution of Language and Speech. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, v. 280. New York: New York Academy of Sciences. ISBN 0-89072-026-6.
  • Hillert, Dieter (2014). The Nature of Language: Evolution, Paradigms and Circuits. New York: Springer Nature.

The origin of language its relationship with human evolution and its consequences have been subjects of study for centuries Scholars wishing to study the origins of language draw inferences from evidence such as the fossil record archaeological evidence contemporary language diversity studies of language acquisition and comparisons between human language and systems of animal communication particularly other primates Many argue for the close relation between the origins of language and the origins of modern human behavior but there is little agreement about the facts and implications of this connection The shortage of direct empirical evidence has caused many scholars to regard the entire topic as unsuitable for serious study in 1866 the Linguistic Society of Paris banned any existing or future debates on the subject a prohibition which remained influential across much of the Western world until the late twentieth century Various hypotheses have been developed on the emergence of language While Charles Darwin s theory of evolution by natural selection had provoked a surge of speculation on the origin of language over a century and a half ago the speculations had not resulted in a scientific consensus by 1996 Despite this academic interest has returned to the topic in the early 1990s Linguists archaeologists psychologists and anthropologists have renewed the investigation into the origin of language with modern methods ApproachesAttempts to explain the origin of language take a variety of forms Continuity theories build on the idea that language exhibits so much complexity that one cannot imagine it simply appearing from nothing in its final form therefore it must have evolved from earlier pre linguistic systems among humans primate ancestors Discontinuity theories take the opposite approach stating that language as a unique trait that cannot be compared to anything found among non humans must have appeared fairly suddenly during the course of human evolution Some theories consider language mostly as an innate faculty largely genetically encoded Other theories regard language as a mainly cultural system that is learned through social interaction Most linguistic scholars as of 2024 update favor continuity based theories but they vary in how they hypothesize language development citation needed Some among those who consider language as mostly innate avoid speculating about specific precursors in nonhuman primates stressing simply that the language faculty must have evolved gradually Those who consider language as learned socially such as Michael Tomasello consider it developing from the cognitively controlled aspects of primate communication mostly gestural rather than vocal Where vocal precursors are concerned many continuity theorists envisage language as evolving from early human capacities for song Noam Chomsky a proponent of discontinuity theory argues that a single change occurred in humans before leaving Africa coincident with the Great Leap approximately 100 000 years ago in which a common language faculty developed in a group of humans and their descendants Chomsky bases his argument on the observation that any human baby of any culture can be raised in a different culture and will completely assimilate the language and behavior of the new culture in which they were raised This implies that no major change to the human language faculty has occurred since they left Africa Transcending the continuity versus discontinuity divide some scholars view the emergence of language as the consequence of some kind of social transformation that by generating unprecedented levels of public trust liberated a genetic potential for linguistic creativity that had previously lain dormant Ritual speech coevolution theory exemplifies this approach Scholars in this intellectual camp point to the fact that even chimpanzees and bonobos have latent symbolic capacities that they rarely if ever use in the wild Objecting to the sudden mutation idea these authors argue that even if a chance mutation were to install a language organ in an evolving bipedal primate it would be adaptively useless under all known primate social conditions A very specific social structure one capable of upholding unusually high levels of public accountability and trust must have evolved before or concurrently with language to make reliance on cheap signals e g words an evolutionarily stable strategy Since the emergence of language lies so far back in human prehistory the relevant developments have left no direct historical traces and comparable processes cannot be observed today Despite this the emergence of new sign languages in modern times Nicaraguan Sign Language for example may offer insights into the developmental stages and creative processes necessarily involved Another approach inspects early human fossils looking for traces of physical adaptation to language use In some cases when the DNA of extinct humans can be recovered the presence or absence of genes considered to be language relevant FOXP2 for example may prove informative Another approach this time archaeological involves invoking symbolic behavior such as repeated ritual activity that may leave an archaeological trace such as mining and modifying ochre pigments for body painting while developing theoretical arguments to justify inferences from symbolism in general to language in particular The time range for the evolution of language or its anatomical prerequisites extends at least in principle from the phylogenetic divergence of Homo 2 3 to 2 4 million years ago from Pan 5 to 6 million years ago to the emergence of full behavioral modernity some 50 000 150 000 years ago Few dispute that Australopithecus probably lacked vocal communication significantly more sophisticated than that of great apes in general but scholarly opinions vary as to the developments since the appearance of Homo some 2 5 million years ago Some scholars assume the development of primitive language like systems proto language as early as Homo habilis while others place the development of symbolic communication only with Homo erectus 1 8 million years ago or with Homo heidelbergensis 0 6 million years ago and the development of language proper with Homo sapiens currently estimated at less than 200 000 years ago Using statistical methods to estimate the time required to achieve the current spread and diversity in modern languages Johanna Nichols a linguist at the University of California Berkeley argued in 1998 that vocal languages must have begun diversifying in the human species at least 100 000 years ago Estimates of this kind are not universally accepted but jointly considering genetic archaeological palaeontological and much other evidence indicates that language likely emerged somewhere in sub Saharan Africa during the Middle Stone Age roughly contemporaneous with the speciation of Homo sapiens Language origin hypothesesEarly speculations I cannot doubt that language owes its origin to the imitation and modification aided by signs and gestures of various natural sounds the voices of other animals and man s own instinctive cries Charles Darwin 1871 The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex In 1861 historical linguist Max Muller published a list of speculative theories concerning the origins of spoken language Bow wow The bow wow or cuckoo theory which Muller attributed to the German philosopher Johann Gottfried Herder saw early words as imitations of the cries of beasts and birds Pooh pooh The pooh pooh theory saw the first words as emotional interjections and exclamations triggered by pain pleasure surprise etc Ding dong Muller suggested what he called the ding dong theory which states that all things have a vibrating natural resonance echoed somehow by humans in their earliest words Yo he ho The yo he ho theory claims that language emerged from collective rhythmic labor that is the attempt to synchronize muscular efforts resulting in sounds such as heave alternating with sounds such as ho Ta ta The ta ta theory did not feature in Max Muller s list having been proposed in 1930 by Sir Richard Paget According to the ta ta theory humans made the earliest words by tongue movements that mimicked manual gestures rendering them audible Most scholars today consider all such theories not so much wrong they occasionally offer peripheral insights as naive and irrelevant The problem with these theories is that they rest on the assumption that once early humans had discovered a workable mechanism for linking sounds with meanings language would automatically have evolved citation needed Much earlier medieval Muslim scholars developed theories on the origin of language Their theories were of five general types Naturalist There is a natural relationship between expressions and the things they signify Language thus emerged from a natural human inclination to imitate the sounds of nature Conventionalist Language is a social convention The names of things are arbitrary inventions of humans Revelationist Language was gifted to humans by God and it was thus God and not humans who named everything Revelationist Conventionalist God revealed to humans a core base of language enabling humans to communicate with each other and then humans invented the rest of language Non Committal The view that conventionalist and revelationist theories are equally plausible Problems of reliability and deception From the perspective of signalling theory the main obstacle to the evolution of language like communication in nature is not a mechanistic one Rather it is the fact that symbols arbitrary associations of sounds or other perceptible forms with corresponding meanings are unreliable and may as well be false The problem of reliability was not recognized at all by Darwin Muller or the other early evolutionary theorists Animal vocal signals are for the most part intrinsically reliable When a cat purrs the signal constitutes direct evidence of the animal s contented state The signal is trusted not because the cat is inclined to be honest but because it just cannot fake that sound Primate vocal calls may be slightly more manipulable but they remain reliable for the same reason because they are hard to fake Primate social intelligence is Machiavellian that is self serving and unconstrained by moral scruples Monkeys apes and particularly humans often attempt to deceive each other while at the same time remaining constantly on guard against falling victim to deception themselves Paradoxically it is theorized that primates resistance to deception is what blocks the evolution of their signalling systems along language like lines Language is ruled out because the best way to guard against being deceived is to ignore all signals except those that are instantly verifiable Words automatically fail this test Words are easy to fake Should they turn out to be lies listeners will adapt by ignoring them in favor of hard to fake indices or cues For language to work listeners must be confident that those with whom they are on speaking terms are generally likely to be honest A peculiar feature of language is displaced reference which means reference to topics outside the currently perceptible situation This property prevents utterances from being corroborated in the immediate here and now For this reason language presupposes relatively high levels of mutual trust in order to become established over time as an evolutionarily stable strategy This stability is born of a longstanding mutual trust and is what grants language its authority A theory of the origins of language must therefore explain why humans could begin trusting cheap signals in ways that other animals apparently cannot The mother tongues hypothesis The mother tongues hypothesis was proposed in 2004 as a possible solution to this problem W Tecumseh Fitch suggested that the Darwinian principle of kin selection the convergence of genetic interests between relatives might be part of the answer Fitch suggests that languages were originally mother tongues If language evolved initially for communication between mothers and their own biological offspring extending later to include adult relatives as well the interests of speakers and listeners would have tended to coincide Fitch argues that shared genetic interests would have led to sufficient trust and cooperation for intrinsically unreliable signals words to become accepted as trustworthy and so begin evolving for the first time Critics of this theory point out that kin selection is not unique to humans So even if one accepts Fitch s initial premises the extension of the posited mother tongue networks from close relatives to more distant relatives remains unexplained Fitch argues however that the extended period of physical immaturity of human infants and the postnatal growth of the human brain give the human infant relationship a different and more extended period of intergenerational dependency than that found in any other species The obligatory reciprocal altruism hypothesis Ib Ulbaek invokes another standard Darwinian principle reciprocal altruism to explain the unusually high levels of intentional honesty necessary for language to evolve Reciprocal altruism can be expressed as the principle that if you scratch my back I ll scratch yours In linguistic terms it would mean that if you speak truthfully to me I ll speak truthfully to you Ordinary Darwinian reciprocal altruism Ulbaek points out is a relationship established between frequently interacting individuals For language to prevail across an entire community however the necessary reciprocity would have needed to be enforced universally instead of being left to individual choice Ulbaek concludes that for language to evolve society as a whole must have been subject to moral regulation Critics point out that this theory fails to explain when how why or by whom obligatory reciprocal altruism could possibly have been enforced Various proposals have been offered to remedy this defect A further criticism is that language does not work on the basis of reciprocal altruism anyway Humans in conversational groups do not withhold information to all except listeners likely to offer valuable information in return On the contrary they seem to want to advertise to the world their access to socially relevant information broadcasting that information without expectation of reciprocity to anyone who will listen The gossip and grooming hypothesis Gossip according to Robin Dunbar in his book Grooming Gossip and the Evolution of Language language does for group living humans what manual grooming does for other primates it allows individuals to service their relationships and so maintain their alliances on the basis of the principle if you scratch my back I ll scratch yours Dunbar argues that as humans began living in increasingly larger social groups the task of manually grooming all one s friends and acquaintances became so time consuming as to be unaffordable In response to this problem humans developed a cheap and ultra efficient form of grooming vocal grooming To keep allies happy one now needs only to groom them with low cost vocal sounds servicing multiple allies simultaneously while keeping both hands free for other tasks Vocal grooming then evolved gradually into vocal language initially in the form of gossip Dunbar s hypothesis seems to be supported by adaptations in the structure of language to the function of narration in general Critics of this theory point out that the efficiency of vocal grooming the fact that words are so cheap would have undermined its capacity to signal commitment of the kind conveyed by time consuming and costly manual grooming A further criticism is that the theory does nothing to explain the crucial transition from vocal grooming the production of pleasing but meaningless sounds to the cognitive complexities of syntactical speech Ritual speech coevolution The ritual speech coevolution theory was originally proposed by social anthropologist Roy Rappaport before being elaborated by anthropologists such as Chris Knight Jerome Lewis Nick Enfield Camilla Power and Ian Watts Cognitive scientist and robotics engineer Luc Steels is another prominent supporter of this general approach as is biological anthropologist and neuroscientist Terrence Deacon A more recent champion of the approach is the Chomskyan specialist in linguistic syntax Cedric Boeckx These scholars argue that there can be no such thing as a theory of the origins of language This is because language is not a separate adaptation but an internal aspect of something much wider namely the entire domain known to anthropologists as human symbolic culture Attempts to explain language independently of this wider context have failed say these scientists because they are addressing a problem with no solution Language would not work outside its necessary environment of confidence building social mechanisms and institutions For example it would not work for a nonhuman ape communicating with others of its kind in the wild Not even the cleverest nonhuman ape could make language work under such conditions Lie and alternative inherent in language pose problems to any society whose structure is founded on language which is to say all human societies I have therefore argued that if there are to be words at all it is necessary to establish The Word and that The Word is established by the invariance of liturgy Roy Rappaport Advocates of this school of thought point out that words are cheap Should an especially clever nonhuman ape or even a group of articulate nonhuman apes try to use words in the wild they would carry no conviction The primate vocalizations that do carry conviction those they actually use are unlike words in that they are emotionally expressive intrinsically meaningful and reliable because they are relatively costly and hard to fake Oral and gestural languages consist of pattern making whose cost is essentially zero As pure social conventions signals of this kind cannot evolve in a Darwinian social world they are a theoretical impossibility Being intrinsically unreliable language works only if one can build up a reputation for trustworthiness within a certain kind of society namely one where symbolic cultural facts sometimes called institutional facts can be established and maintained through collective social endorsement In any hunter gatherer society the basic mechanism for establishing trust in symbolic cultural facts is collective ritual Therefore the task facing researchers into the origins of language is more multidisciplinary than is usually supposed It involves addressing the evolutionary emergence of human ritual kinship religion and symbolic culture taken as a whole with language an important but subsidiary component In a 2023 article Cedric Boeckx endorses the Rappaport Searle Knight way of capturing the special nature of human words Words are symbols This means that from a standpoint in Darwinian signal evolution theory they are patently false signals Words are facts but facts whose existence depends entirely on subjective belief In philosophical terms they are institutional facts fictions that are granted factual status within human social institutions From this standpoint according to Boeckx linguistic utterances are symbolic to the extent that they are patent falsehoods serving as guides to communicative intentions They are communicatively useful untruths as it were The reason why words can survive among humans despite being false is largely down to a matter of trust The corresponding origins theory is that language can only have begun to evolve from the moment humans started reciprocally faking in communicatively helpful ways i e when they became capable of upholding the levels of trust necessary for linguistic communication to work The point here is that an ape or other nonhuman must always carry at least some of the burden of generating the trust necessary for communication to work That is in order to be taken seriously each signal it emits must be a patently reliable one trusted because it is rooted in some way in the real world But now imagine what might happen under social conditions where trust could be taken for granted The signaller could stop worrying about reliability and concentrate instead on perceptual discriminability Carried to its conclusion this should permit digital signaling the cheapest and most efficient kind of communication From this philosophical standpoint animal communication cannot be digital because it does not have the luxury of being patently false Costly signals of any kind can only be evaluated on an analog scale Put differently truly symbolic digital signals become socially acceptable only under highly unusual conditions such as those internal to a ritually bonded community whose members are not tempted to lie citation needed Critics of the speech ritual co evolution idea theory include Noam Chomsky who terms it the non existence hypothesis a denial of the very existence of language as an object of study for natural science Chomsky s own theory is that language emerged in an instant and in perfect form prompting his critics in turn to retort that only something that does not exist a theoretical construct or convenient scientific fiction could possibly emerge in such a miraculous way The controversy remains unresolved Tool resiliency grammar and language production Acheulean tool use began during the Lower Paleolithic approximately 1 75 million years ago Studies focusing on the lateralization of Acheulean tool production and language production have noted similar areas of blood flow when engaging in these activities separately this theory suggests that the brain functions needed for the production of tools across generations is consistent with the brain systems required for producing language Researchers used functional transcranial Doppler ultrasonography fTDC and had participants perform activities related to the creation of tools using the same methods during the Lower Paleolithic as well as a task designed specifically for word generation The purpose of this test was to focus on the planning aspect of Acheulean tool making and cued word generation in language an example of cued word generation would be trying to list all words beginning with a given letter Theories of language developing alongside tool use has been theorized by multiple individuals however until recently there has been little empirical data to support these hypotheses Focusing on the results of the study performed by Uomini et al evidence for the usage of the same brain areas has been found when looking at cued word generation and Acheulean tool use The relationship between tool use and language production is found in working and planning memory respectively and was found to be similar across a variety of participants furthering evidence that these areas of the brain are shared This evidence lends credibility to the theory that language developed alongside tool use in the Lower Paleolithic Humanistic theory The humanistic tradition considers language as a human invention Renaissance philosopher Antoine Arnauld gave a detailed description of his idea of the origin of language in Port Royal Grammar According to Arnauld people are social and rational by nature and this urged them to create language as a means to communicate their ideas to others Language construction would have occurred through a slow and gradual process In later theory especially in functional linguistics the primacy of communication is emphasised over psychological needs The exact way language evolved is however not considered as vital to the study of languages Structural linguist Ferdinand de Saussure abandoned evolutionary linguistics after having come to the firm conclusion that it would not be able to provide any further revolutionary insight after the completion of the major works in historical linguistics by the end of the 19th century Saussure was particularly sceptical of the attempts of August Schleicher and other Darwinian linguists to access prehistorical languages through series of reconstructions of proto languages Saussure s solution to the problem of language evolution involves dividing theoretical linguistics in two Evolutionary and historical linguistics are renamed as diachronic linguistics It is the study of language change but it has only limited explanatory power due to the inadequacy of all of the reliable research material that could ever be made available Synchronic linguistics in contrast aims to widen scientists understanding of language through a study of a given contemporary or historical language stage as a system in its own right Although Saussure put much focus on diachronic linguistics later structuralists who equated structuralism with the synchronic analysis were sometimes criticised of ahistoricism According to structural anthropologist Claude Levi Strauss language and meaning in opposition to knowledge which develops slowly and progressively must have appeared in an instant Structuralism as first introduced to sociology by Emile Durkheim is nonetheless a type of humanistic evolutionary theory which explains diversification as necessitated by growing complexity There was a shift of focus to functional explanation after Saussure s death Functional structuralists including the Prague Circle linguists and Andre Martinet explained the growth and maintenance of structures as being necessitated by their functions For example novel technologies make it necessary for people to invent new words but these may lose their function and be forgotten as the technologies are eventually replaced by more modern ones Chomsky s single step theory According to Chomsky s single mutation theory the emergence of language resembled the formation of a crystal with digital infinity as the seed crystal in a super saturated primate brain on the verge of blossoming into the human mind by physical law once evolution added a single small but crucial keystone Thus in this theory language appeared rather suddenly within the history of human evolution Chomsky writing with computational linguist and computer scientist Robert C Berwick suggests that this scenario is completely compatible with modern biology They note that none of the recent accounts of human language evolution seem to have completely grasped the shift from conventional Darwinism to its fully stochastic modern version specifically that there are stochastic effects not only due to sampling like directionless drift but also due to directed stochastic variation in fitness migration and heritability indeed all the forces that affect individual or gene frequencies All this can affect evolutionary outcomes outcomes that as far as we can make out are not brought out in recent books on the evolution of language yet would arise immediately in the case of any new genetic or individual innovation precisely the kind of scenario likely to be in play when talking about language s emergence Citing evolutionary geneticist Svante Paabo they concur that a substantial difference must have occurred to differentiate Homo sapiens from Neanderthals to prompt the relentless spread of our species who had never crossed open water up and out of Africa and then on across the entire planet in just a few tens of thousands of years What we do not see is any kind of gradualism in new tool technologies or innovations like fire shelters or figurative art Berwick and Chomsky therefore suggest language emerged approximately between 200 000 years ago and 60 000 years ago between the appearance of the first anatomically modern humans in southern Africa and the last exodus from Africa respectively That leaves us with about 130 000 years or approximately 5 000 6 000 generations of time for evolutionary change This is not overnight in one generation as some have incorrectly inferred but neither is it on the scale of geological eons It s time enough within the ballpark for what Nilsson and Pelger 1994 estimated as the time required for the full evolution of a vertebrate eye from a single cell even without the invocation of any evo devo effects The single mutation theory of language evolution has been directly questioned on different grounds A formal analysis of the probability of such a mutation taking place and going to fixation in the species has concluded that such a scenario is unlikely with multiple mutations with more moderate fitness effects being more probable Another criticism has questioned the logic of the argument for single mutation and puts forward that from the formal simplicity of Merge the capacity Berwick and Chomsky deem the core property of human language that emerged suddenly one cannot derive the number of evolutionary steps that led to it The Romulus and Remus hypothesis The Romulus and Remus hypothesis proposed by neuroscientist seeks to address the question as to why the modern speech apparatus originated over 500 000 years before the earliest signs of modern human imagination This hypothesis proposes that there were two phases that led to modern recursive language The phenomenon of recursion occurs across multiple linguistic domains arguably most prominently in syntax and morphology Thus by nesting a structure such as a sentence or a word within themselves it enables the generation of potentially countably infinite new variations of that structure For example the base sentence Peter likes apples can be nested in irrealis clauses to produce Mary said Peter likes apples Paul believed Mary said Peter likes apples and so forth The first phase includes the slow development of non recursive language with a large vocabulary along with the modern speech apparatus which includes changes to the hyoid bone increased voluntary control of the muscles of the diaphragm and the evolution of the FOXP2 gene as well as other changes by 600 000 years ago Then the second phase was a rapid Chomskian single step consisting of three distinct events that happened in quick succession around 70 000 years ago and allowed the shift from non recursive to recursive language in early hominins A genetic mutation that slowed down the prefrontal synthesis PFS critical period of at least two children that lived together This allowed these children to create recursive elements of language such as spatial prepositions Then this merged with their parents non recursive language to create recursive language It is not enough for children to have a modern prefrontal cortex PFC to allow the development of PFS the children must also be mentally stimulated and have recursive elements already in their language to acquire PFS Since their parents would not have invented these elements yet the children would have had to do it themselves which is a common occurrence among young children that live together in a process called cryptophasia This means that delayed PFC development would have allowed more time to acquire PFS and develop recursive elements Delayed PFC development also comes with negative consequences such as a longer period of reliance on one s parents to survive and lower survival rates For modern language to have occurred PFC delay had to have an immense survival benefit in later life such as PFS ability This suggests that the mutation that caused PFC delay and the development of recursive language and PFS occurred simultaneously which lines up with evidence of a genetic bottleneck around 70 000 years ago This could have been the result of a few individuals who developed PFS and recursive language which gave them significant competitive advantage over all other humans at the time Gestural theory The gestural theory states that human language developed from gestures that were used for simple communication Two types of evidence support this theory Gestural language and vocal language depend on similar neural systems The regions on the cortex that are responsible for mouth and hand movements border each other Nonhuman primates can use gestures or symbols for at least primitive communication and some of their gestures resemble those of humans such as the begging posture with the hands stretched out which humans share with chimpanzees Research has found strong support for the idea that oral communication and sign language depend on similar neural structures Patients who used sign language and who suffered from a left hemisphere lesion showed the same disorders with their sign language as vocal patients did with their oral language Other researchers found that the same left hemisphere brain regions were active during sign language as during the use of vocal or written language Primate gesture is at least partially genetic different nonhuman apes will perform gestures characteristic of their species even if they have never seen another ape perform that gesture For example gorillas beat their breasts This shows that gestures are an intrinsic and important part of primate communication which supports the idea that language evolved from gesture Further evidence suggests that gesture and language are linked In humans manually gesturing has an effect on concurrent vocalizations thus creating certain natural vocal associations of manual efforts Chimpanzees move their mouths when performing fine motor tasks These mechanisms may have played an evolutionary role in enabling the development of intentional vocal communication as a supplement to gestural communication Voice modulation could have been prompted by preexisting manual actions From infancy gestures both supplement and predict speech This addresses the idea that gestures quickly change in humans from a sole means of communication from a very young age to a supplemental and predictive behavior that is used despite the ability to communicate verbally This too serves as a parallel to the idea that gestures developed first and language subsequently built upon it Two possible scenarios have been proposed for the development of language one of which supports the gestural theory Language developed from the calls of human ancestors Language was derived from gesture The first perspective that language evolved from the calls of human ancestors seems logical because both humans and animals make sounds or cries One evolutionary reason to refute this is that anatomically the centre that controls calls in monkeys and other animals is located in a completely different part of the brain than in humans In monkeys this centre is located in the depths of the brain related to emotions In the human system it is located in an area unrelated to emotion Humans can communicate simply to communicate without emotions So anatomically this scenario does not work This suggests that language was derived from gesture humans communicated by gesture first and sound was attached later The important question for gestural theories is why there was a shift to vocalization Various explanations have been proposed Human ancestors started to use more and more tools meaning that their hands were occupied and could no longer be used for gesturing Manual gesturing requires that speakers and listeners be visible to one another In many situations they might need to communicate even without visual contact for example after nightfall or when foliage obstructs visibility A composite hypothesis holds that early language took the form of part gestural and part vocal mimesis imitative song and dance combining modalities because all signals like those of nonhuman apes and monkeys still needed to be costly in order to be intrinsically convincing In that event each multi media display would have needed not just to disambiguate an intended meaning but also to inspire confidence in the signal s reliability The suggestion is that only once community wide contractual understandings had come into force could trust in communicative intentions be automatically assumed at last allowing Homo sapiens to shift to a more efficient default format Since vocal distinctive features sound contrasts are ideal for this purpose it was only at this point when intrinsically persuasive body language was no longer required to convey each message that the decisive shift from manual gesture to the current primary reliance on spoken language occurred A comparable hypothesis states that in articulate language gesture and vocalisation are intrinsically linked as language evolved from equally intrinsically linked dance and song Humans still use manual and facial gestures when they speak especially when people meet who have no language in common There are also a great number of sign languages still in existence commonly associated with Deaf communities These sign languages are equal in complexity sophistication and expressive power to any oral language The cognitive functions are similar and the parts of the brain used are similar The main difference is that the phonemes are produced on the outside of the body articulated with hands body and facial expression rather than inside the body articulated with tongue teeth lips and breathing Compare the motor theory of speech perception Critics of gestural theory note that it is difficult to name serious reasons why the initial pitch based vocal communication which is present in primates would be abandoned in favor of the much less effective non vocal gestural communication However Michael Corballis has pointed out that it is supposed that primate vocal communication such as alarm calls cannot be controlled consciously unlike hand movement and thus it is not credible as precursor to human language primate vocalization is rather homologous to and continued in involuntary reflexes connected with basic human emotions such as screams or laughter the fact that these can be faked does not disprove the fact that genuine involuntary responses to fear or surprise exist Also gesture is not generally less effective and depending on the situation can even be advantageous for example in a loud environment or where it is important to be silent such as on a hunt Other challenges to the gesture first theory have been presented by researchers in psycholinguistics including David McNeill Tool use associated sound in the evolution of language Proponents of the motor theory of language evolution have primarily focused on the visual domain and communication through observation of movements The Tool use sound hypothesis suggests that the production and perception of sound also contributed substantially particularly incidental sound of locomotion ISOL and tool use sound TUS Human bipedalism resulted in rhythmic and more predictable ISOL That may have stimulated the evolution of musical abilities auditory working memory and abilities to produce complex vocalizations and to mimic natural sounds Since the human brain proficiently extracts information about objects and events from the sounds they produce TUS and mimicry of TUS might have achieved an iconic function The prevalence of sound symbolism in many extant languages supports this idea Self produced TUS activates multimodal brain processing motor neurons hearing proprioception touch vision and TUS stimulates primate audiovisual mirror neurons which is likely to stimulate the development of association chains Tool use and auditory gestures involve motor processing of the forelimbs which is associated with the evolution of vertebrate vocal communication The production perception and mimicry of TUS may have resulted in a limited number of vocalizations or protowords that were associated with tool use A new way to communicate about tools especially when out of sight would have had selective advantage A gradual change in acoustic properties meaning or both could have resulted in arbitrariness and an expanded repertoire of words Humans have been increasingly exposed to TUS over millions of years coinciding with the period during which spoken language evolved Mirror neurons and language origins In humans functional MRI studies have reported finding areas homologous to the monkey mirror neuron system in the inferior frontal cortex close to Broca s area one of the language regions of the brain This has led to suggestions that human language evolved from a gesture performance understanding system implemented in mirror neurons Mirror neurons have been said to have the potential to provide a mechanism for action understanding imitation learning and the simulation of other people s behavior This hypothesis is supported by some cytoarchitectonic homologies between monkey premotor area F5 and human Broca s area Rates of vocabulary expansion link to the ability of children to vocally mirror non words and so to acquire the new word pronunciations Such speech repetition occurs automatically quickly and separately in the brain to speech perception Moreover such vocal imitation can occur without comprehension such as in speech shadowing and echolalia Further evidence for this link comes from a recent study in which the brain activity of two participants was measured using fMRI while they were gesturing words to each other using hand gestures with a game of charades a modality that some have suggested might represent the evolutionary precursor of human language Analysis of the data using Granger Causality revealed that the mirror neuron system of the observer indeed reflects the pattern of activity of in the motor system of the sender supporting the idea that the motor concept associated with the words is indeed transmitted from one brain to another using the mirror system Not all linguists agree with the above arguments however In particular supporters of Noam Chomsky argue against the possibility that the mirror neuron system can play any role in the hierarchical recursive structures essential to syntax Putting down the baby theory According to Dean Falk s putting down the baby theory vocal interactions between early hominid mothers and infants began a sequence of events that led eventually to human ancestors earliest words The basic idea is that evolving human mothers unlike their counterparts in other primates could not move around and forage with their infants clinging onto their backs Loss of fur in the human case left infants with no means of clinging on Frequently therefore mothers had to put their babies down As a result these babies needed to be reassured that they were not being abandoned Mothers responded by developing motherese an infant directed communicative system embracing facial expressions body language touching patting caressing laughter tickling and emotionally expressive contact calls The argument is that language developed out of this interaction In The Mental and Social Life of Babies psychologist Kenneth Kaye noted that no usable adult language could have evolved without interactive communication between very young children and adults No symbolic system could have survived from one generation to the next if it could not have been easily acquired by young children under their normal conditions of social life From where to what theory An illustration of the from where to what model of language evolution The from where to what model is a language evolution model that is derived primarily from the organization of language processing in the brain into two structures the auditory dorsal stream and the auditory ventral stream It hypothesizes seven stages of language evolution see illustration Speech originated for the purpose of exchanging contact calls between mothers and their offspring to find one another in the event they became separated illustration part 1 The contact calls could be modified with intonations in order to express either a higher or lower level of distress illustration part 2 The use of two types of contact calls enabled the first question answer conversation In this scenario the child would emit a low level distress call to express a desire to interact with an object and the mother would respond with either another low level distress call to express approval of the interaction or a high level distress call to express disapproval illustration part 3 Over time the improved use of intonations and vocal control led to the invention of unique calls phonemes associated with distinct objects illustration part 4 At first children learned the calls phonemes from their parents by imitating their lip movements illustration part 5 Eventually infants were able to encode into long term memory all the calls phonemes Consequentially mimicry via lip reading was limited to infancy and older children learned new calls through mimicry without lip reading illustration part 6 Once individuals became capable of producing a sequence of calls this allowed multi syllabic words which increased the size of their vocabulary illustration part 7 The use of words composed of sequences of syllables provided the infra structure for communicating with sequences of words i e sentences The theory s name is derived from the two auditory streams which are both found in the brains of humans and other primates The auditory ventral stream is responsible for sound recognition and so it is referred to as the auditory what stream In primates the auditory dorsal stream is responsible for sound localization and thus it is called the auditory where stream Only in humans in the left hemisphere is it also responsible for other processes associated with language use and acquisition such as speech repetition and production integration of phonemes with their lip movements perception and production of intonations phonological long term memory long term memory storage of the sounds of words and phonological working memory the temporary storage of the sounds of words Some evidence also indicates a role in recognizing others by their voices The emergence of each of these functions in the auditory dorsal stream represents an intermediate stage in the evolution of language A contact call origin for human language is consistent with animal studies as like human language contact call discrimination in monkeys is lateralised to the left hemisphere Mice with knock out to language related genes such as FOXP2 and SRPX2 also resulted in the pups no longer emitting contact calls when separated from their mothers Supporting this model is also its ability to explain unique human phenomena such as the use of intonations when converting words into commands and questions the tendency of infants to mimic vocalizations during the first year of life and its disappearance later on and the protruding and visible human lips which are not found in other apes This theory could be considered an elaboration of the putting down the baby theory of language evolution Grammaticalisation theory Grammaticalization is a continuous historical process in which free standing words develop into grammatical appendages while these in turn become ever more specialized and grammatical An initially incorrect usage in becoming accepted leads to unforeseen consequences triggering knock on effects and extended sequences of change Paradoxically grammar evolves because in the final analysis humans care less about grammatical niceties than about making themselves understood If this is how grammar evolves today according to this school of thought similar principles at work can be legitimately inferred among distant human ancestors when grammar itself was first being established In order to reconstruct the evolutionary transition from early language to languages with complex grammars it is necessary to know which hypothetical sequences are plausible and which are not In order to convey abstract ideas the first recourse of speakers is to fall back on immediately recognizable concrete imagery very often deploying metaphors rooted in shared bodily experience A familiar example is the use of concrete terms such as belly or back to convey abstract meanings such as inside or behind Equally metaphorical is the strategy of representing temporal patterns on the model of spatial ones For example English speakers might say It is going to rain modelled on I am going to London This can be abbreviated colloquially to It s gonna rain Even when in a hurry English speakers do not say I m gonna London the contraction is restricted to the job of specifying tense From such examples it can be seen why grammaticalisation is consistently unidirectional from concrete to abstract meaning not the other way around Grammaticalization theorists picture early language as simple perhaps consisting only of nouns p 111 Even under that extreme theoretical assumption however it is difficult to imagine what would realistically have prevented people from using say spear as if it were a verb Spear that pig People might have used their nouns as verbs or their verbs as nouns as occasion demanded In short while a noun only language might seem theoretically possible grammaticalization theory indicates that it cannot have remained fixed in that state for any length of time Creativity drives grammatical change This presupposes a certain attitude on the part of listeners Instead of punishing deviations from accepted usage listeners must prioritise imaginative mind reading Imaginative creativity emitting a leopard alarm when no leopard was present for example is not the kind of behaviour which say vervet monkeys would appreciate or reward Creativity and reliability are incompatible demands for Machiavellian primates as for animals generally the overriding pressure is to demonstrate reliability If humans escape these constraints it is because in their case listeners are primarily interested in mental states To focus on mental states is to accept fictions inhabitants of the imagination as potentially informative and interesting An example is metaphor a metaphor is literally a false statement In Romeo and Juliet Romeo declares Juliet is the sun Juliet is a woman not a ball of plasma in the sky but human listeners are not or not usually pedants insistent on point by point factual accuracy They want to know what the speaker has in mind Grammaticalisation is essentially based on metaphor To outlaw its use would be to stop grammar from evolving and by the same token to exclude all possibility of expressing abstract thought A criticism of all this is that while grammaticalization theory might explain language change today it does not satisfactorily address the really difficult challenge explaining the initial transition from primate style communication to language as it is known today Rather the theory assumes that language already exists As Bernd Heine and Tania Kuteva acknowledge Grammaticalisation requires a linguistic system that is used regularly and frequently within a community of speakers and is passed on from one group of speakers to another Outside modern humans such conditions do not prevail Evolution progression model Human language is used for self expression however expression displays different stages The consciousness of self and feelings represents the stage immediately prior to the external phonetic expression of feelings in the form of sound i e language Intelligent animals such as dolphins Eurasian magpies and chimpanzees live in communities wherein they assign themselves roles for group survival and show emotions such as sympathy When such animals view their reflection mirror test they recognize themselves and exhibit self consciousness Notably humans evolved in a quite different environment than that of these animals Human survival became easier with the development of tools shelter and fire thus facilitating further advancement of social interaction self expression and tool making as for hunting and gathering The increasing brain size allowed advanced provisioning and tools and the technological advances during the Palaeolithic era that built upon the previous evolutionary innovations of bipedalism and hand versatility allowed the development of human language citation needed Self domesticated ape theory According to a study investigating the song differences between white rumped munias and its domesticated counterpart Bengalese finch the wild munias use a highly stereotyped song sequence whereas the domesticated ones sing a highly unconstrained song In wild finches song syntax is subject to female preference sexual selection and remains relatively fixed However in the Bengalese finch natural selection is replaced by breeding in this case for colorful plumage and thus decoupled from selective pressures stereotyped song syntax is allowed to drift It is replaced supposedly within 1000 generations by a variable and learned sequence Wild finches moreover are thought incapable of learning song sequences from other finches In the field of bird vocalization brains capable of producing only an innate song have very simple neural pathways the primary forebrain motor centre called the robust nucleus of arcopallium connects to midbrain vocal outputs which in turn project to brainstem motor nuclei By contrast in brains capable of learning songs the arcopallium receives input from numerous additional forebrain regions including those involved in learning and social experience Control over song generation has become less constrained more distributed and more flexible One way to think about human evolution is that humans are self domesticated apes Just as domestication relaxed selection for stereotypic songs in the finches mate choice was supplanted by choices made by the aesthetic sensibilities of bird breeders and their customers so might human cultural domestication have relaxed selection on many of their primate behavioural traits allowing old pathways to degenerate and reconfigure Given the highly indeterminate way that mammalian brains develop they basically construct themselves bottom up with one set of neuronal interactions preparing for the next round of interactions degraded pathways would tend to seek out and find new opportunities for synaptic hookups Such inherited de differentiations of brain pathways might have contributed to the functional complexity that characterises human language And as exemplified by the finches such de differentiations can occur in very rapid time frames Speech and language for communicationThis section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these messages Much of the language in this section is vague and does not match the encyclopedic tone Learn how and when to remove this message A distinction can be drawn between speech and language Language is not necessarily spoken it might alternatively be written or signed Speech is among a number of different methods of encoding and transmitting linguistic information albeit arguably by whom the most natural one Some scholars such as Noam Chomsky view language as an initially cognitive development its externalisation to serve communicative purposes occurring later in human evolution According to one such school of thought the key feature distinguishing human language is recursion in this context the iterative embedding of phrases within phrases Other scholars notably Daniel Everett deny that recursion is universal citing certain languages e g Piraha which allegedly by whom lack this feature The ability to ask questions is considered by some like whom to distinguish language from non human systems of communication Some captive primates notably bonobos and chimpanzees having learned to use rudimentary signing to communicate with their human trainers proved able to respond correctly to complex questions and requests Yet they failed to ask even the simplest questions themselves Conversely human children are able to ask their first questions using only question intonation at the babbling period of their development long before they start using syntactic structures Although babies from different cultures acquire native languages from their social environment all languages of the world without exception tonal non tonal intonational and accented use similar rising question intonation for yes no questions Except of course the ones that don t clarification needed This fact is a strong evidence of the universality of question intonation In general according to some authors like whom sentence intonation pitch is pivotal in spoken grammar and is the basic information used by children to learn the grammar of whatever language Cognitive development and languageLanguage users have high level reference or deixis the ability to refer to things or states of being that are not in the immediate realm of the speaker This ability is often related to theory of mind or an awareness of the other as a being like the self with individual wants and intentions According to Chomsky Hauser and Fitch 2002 there are six main aspects of this high level reference system Theory of mind Capacity to acquire non linguistic conceptual representations such as the object kind distinction Referential vocal signals Imitation as a rational intentional system Voluntary control over signal production as evidence of intentional communication Number representationTheory of mind Simon Baron Cohen 1999 argues that theory of mind must have preceded language use based on evidence of use of the following characteristics as much as 40 000 years ago intentional communication repairing failed communication teaching intentional persuasion intentional deception building shared plans and goals intentional sharing of focus or topic and pretending Moreover Baron Cohen argues that many primates show some but not all of these abilities citation needed Call and Tomasello s research on chimpanzees supports this in that individual chimps seem to understand that other chimps have awareness knowledge and intention but do not seem to understand false beliefs Many primates show some tendencies toward a theory of mind but not a full one as humans have Ultimately there is some consensus within the field that a theory of mind is necessary for language use Thus the development of a full theory of mind in humans was a necessary precursor to full language use Number representation In one particular study rats and pigeons were required to press a button a certain number of times to get food The animals showed very accurate distinction for numbers less than four but as the numbers increased the error rate increased In another the primatologist Tetsuro Matsuzawa attempted to teach chimpanzees Arabic numerals The difference between primates and humans in this regard was very large as it took the chimps thousands of trials to learn 1 9 with each number requiring a similar amount of training time yet after learning the meaning of 1 2 and 3 and sometimes 4 children after the age of 5 5 to 6 easily comprehend the value of greater integers by using a successor function i e 2 is 1 greater than 1 3 is 1 greater than 2 4 is 1 greater than 3 once 4 is reached it seems most children suddenly understand that the value of any integer n is 1 greater than the previous integer Put simply other primates learn the meaning of numbers one by one similar to their approach to other referential symbols while children first learn an arbitrary list of symbols 1 2 3 4 and then later learn their precise meanings These results can be seen as evidence for the application of the open ended generative property of language in human numeral cognition Linguistic structuresLexical phonological principle Hockett 1966 details a list of features regarded as essential to describing human language In the domain of the lexical phonological principle two features of this list are most important Productivity users can create and understand completely novel messages New messages are freely coined by blending analogizing from or transforming old ones Either new or old elements are freely assigned new semantic loads by circumstances and context This says that in every language new idioms constantly come into existence Duality of Patterning a large number of meaningful elements are made up of a conveniently small number of independently meaningless yet message differentiating elements The sound system of a language is composed of a finite set of simple phonological items Under the specific phonotactic rules of a given language these items can be recombined and concatenated giving rise to morphology and the open ended lexicon A key feature of language is that a simple finite set of phonological items gives rise to an infinite lexical system wherein rules determine the form of each item and meaning is inextricably linked with form Phonological syntax then is a simple combination of pre existing phonological units Related to this is another essential feature of human language lexical syntax wherein pre existing units are combined giving rise to semantically novel or distinct lexical items This paragraph needs citation s Certain elements of the lexical phonological principle are known to exist outside of humans While all or nearly all have been documented in some form in the natural world very few coexist within the same species Bird song singing nonhuman apes and the songs of whales all display phonological syntax combining units of sound into larger structures apparently devoid of enhanced or novel meaning Certain other primate species do have simple phonological systems with units referring to entities in the world However in contrast to human systems the units in these primates systems normally occur in isolation betraying a lack of lexical syntax There is new when evidence to suggest that Campbell s monkeys also display lexical syntax combining two calls a predator alarm call with a boom the combination of which denotes a lessened threat of danger however it is still unclear whether this is a lexical or a morphological phenomenon Pidgins and creoles Pidgins are significantly simplified languages with only rudimentary grammar and a restricted vocabulary In their early stage pidgins mainly consist of nouns verbs and adjectives with few or no articles prepositions conjunctions or auxiliary verbs Often the grammar has no fixed word order and the words have no inflection If contact is maintained between the groups speaking the pidgin for long periods of time the pidgins may become more complex over many generations If the children of one generation adopt the pidgin as their native language it develops into a creole language which becomes fixed and acquires a more complex grammar with fixed phonology syntax morphology and syntactic embedding The syntax and morphology of such languages may often have local innovations not obviously derived from any of the parent languages Studies of creole languages around the world have suggested that they display remarkable similarities in grammar citation needed and are developed uniformly from pidgins in a single generation These similarities are apparent even when creoles do not have any common language origins In addition creoles are similar despite being developed in isolation from each other Syntactic similarities include subject verb object word order Even when creoles are derived from languages with a different word order they often develop the SVO word order Creoles tend to have similar usage patterns for definite and indefinite articles and similar movement rules for phrase structures even when the parent languages do not Evolutionary timelinePrimate communication Field primatologists can give useful insights into great ape communication in the wild One notable finding is that nonhuman primates including the other great apes produce calls that are graded as opposed to categorically differentiated with listeners striving to evaluate subtle gradations in signallers emotional and bodily states Nonhuman apes seemingly find it extremely difficult to produce vocalisations in the absence of the corresponding emotional states In captivity nonhuman apes have been taught rudimentary forms of sign language or have been persuaded to use lexigrams symbols that do not graphically resemble the corresponding words on computer keyboards Some nonhuman apes such as Kanzi have been able to learn and use hundreds of lexigrams The Broca s and Wernicke s areas in the primate brain are responsible for controlling the muscles of the face tongue mouth and larynx as well as recognizing sounds Primates are known to make vocal calls and these calls are generated by circuits in the brainstem and limbic system In the wild the communication of vervet monkeys has been the most extensively studied They are known to make up to ten different vocalizations Many of these are used to warn other members of the group about approaching predators They include a leopard call a snake call and an eagle call Each call triggers a different defensive strategy in the monkeys who hear the call and scientists were able to elicit predictable responses from the monkeys using loudspeakers and prerecorded sounds Other vocalisations may be used for identification If an infant monkey calls its mother turns toward it but other vervet mothers turn instead toward that infant s mother to see what she will do Similarly researchers have demonstrated that chimpanzees in captivity use different words in reference to different foods They recorded vocalisations that chimps made in reference for example to grapes and then other chimps pointed at pictures of grapes when they heard the recorded sound Ardipithecus ramidus A study published in HOMO Journal of Comparative Human Biology in 2017 claims that Ardipithecus ramidus a hominin dated at approximately 4 5Ma shows the first evidence of an anatomical shift in the hominin lineage suggestive of increased vocal capability This study compared the skull of A ramidus with 29 chimpanzee skulls of different ages and found that in numerous features A ramidus clustered with the infant and juvenile measures as opposed to the adult measures Such affinity with the shape dimensions of infant and juvenile chimpanzee skull architecture it was argued may have resulted in greater vocal capability This assertion was based on the notion that the chimpanzee vocal tract ratios that prevent speech are a result of growth factors associated with puberty growth factors absent in A ramidus ontogeny A ramidus was also found to have a degree of cervical lordosis more conducive to vocal modulation when compared with chimpanzees as well as cranial base architecture suggestive of increased vocal capability What was significant in this study according to the authors was the observation that the changes in skull architecture that correlate with reduced aggression are the same changes necessary for the evolution of early hominin vocal ability In integrating data on anatomical correlates of primate mating and social systems with studies of skull and vocal tract architecture that facilitate speech production the authors argue that paleoanthropologists prior to their study have failed to understand the important relationship between early hominin social evolution and the evolution of our species capacities for language While the skull of A ramidus according to the authors lacks the anatomical impediments to speech evident in chimpanzees it is unclear what the vocal capabilities of this early hominin were While they suggest A ramidus based on similar vocal tract ratios may have had vocal capabilities equivalent to a modern human infant or very young child they concede this is a debatable and speculative hypothesis However they do claim that changes in skull architecture through processes of social selection were a necessary prerequisite for language evolution As they write We propose that as a result of paedomorphic morphogenesis of the cranial base and craniofacial morphology Ar ramidus would have not been limited in terms of the mechanical components of speech production as chimpanzees and bonobos are It is possible that Ar ramidus had vocal capability approximating that of chimpanzees and bonobos with its idiosyncratic skull morphology not resulting in any significant advances in speech capability In this sense the anatomical features analysed in this essay would have been exapted in later more voluble species of hominin However given the selective advantages of pro social vocal synchrony we suggest the species would have developed significantly more complex vocal abilities than chimpanzees and bonobos Early Homo Anatomically some scholars believe that features of bipedalism developed in the australopithecines around 3 5 million years ago Around this time these structural developments within the skull led to a more prominently L shaped vocal tract page needed In order to generate the sounds modern Homo sapiens are capable of making such as vowels it is vital that Early Homo populations must have a specifically shaped voice track and a lower sitting larynx Opposing research previously suggested that Neanderthals were physically incapable of creating the full range of vocals seen in modern humans due to the differences in larynx placement Establishing distinct larynx positions through fossil remains of Homo sapiens and Neanderthals would support this theory however modern research has revealed that the hyoid bone was indistinguishable in the two populations Though research has shown a lower sitting larynx is important to producing speech another theory states it may not be as important as once thought Cataldo Migliano and Vinicius report speech alone appears inadequate for transmitting stone tool making knowledge and suggest that speech may have emerged due to an increase in complex social interactions Archaic Homo sapiens Steven Mithen proposed the term Hmmmmm for the pre linguistic system of communication posited to have been used by archaic Homo beginning with Homo ergaster and reaching the highest sophistication in the Middle Pleistocene with Homo heidelbergensis and Homo neanderthalensis Hmmmmm is an acronym for holistic non compositional manipulative utterances are commands or suggestions not descriptive statements multi modal acoustic as well as gestural and facial musical and mimetic Homo erectus Evidence for Homo erectus potentially using language comes in the form of Acheulean tool usage The use of abstract thought in the formation of Acheulean hand axes coincides with the symbol creation necessary for simple language Recent language theories present recursion as the unique facet of human language and theory of mind However breaking down language into its symbolic parts separating meaning from the requirements of grammar it becomes possible to see that language does not depend on either recursion or grammar This can be evidenced by the Piraha language users in Brazil that have no myth or creation stories no numbers and no colors within their language This is to highlight that even though grammar may have been unavailable use of foresight planning and symbolic thought can be evidence of language as early as one million years ago with Homo erectus Homo heidelbergensis Homo heidelbergensis was a close relative most probably a migratory descendant of Homo ergaster Some researchers believe this species to be the first hominin to make controlled vocalisations possibly mimicking animal vocalisations and that as Homo heidelbergensis developed more sophisticated culture proceeded from this point and possibly developed an early form of symbolic language Homo neanderthalensis The discovery in 1989 of the Neanderthal Kebara 2 hyoid bone suggests that Neanderthals may have been anatomically capable of producing sounds similar to modern humans The hypoglossal nerve which passes through the hypoglossal canal controls the movements of the tongue which may have enabled voicing for size exaggeration see size exaggeration hypothesis below or may reflect speech abilities However although Neanderthals may have been anatomically able to speak Richard G Klein in 2004 doubted that they possessed a fully modern language He largely bases his doubts on the fossil record of archaic humans and their stone tool kit Bart de Boer in 2017 acknowledges this ambiguity of a universally accepted Neanderthal vocal tract however he notes the similarities in the thoracic vertebral canal potential air sacs and hyoid bones between modern humans and Neanderthals to suggest the presence of complex speech For two million years following the emergence of Homo habilis the stone tool technology of hominins changed very little Klein who has worked extensively on ancient stone tools describes the crude stone tool kit of archaic humans as impossible to break down into categories based on their function and reports that Neanderthals seem to have had little concern for the final aesthetic form of their tools Klein argues that the Neanderthal brain may have not reached the level of complexity required for modern speech even if the physical apparatus for speech production was well developed The issue of the Neanderthal s level of cultural and technological sophistication remains a controversial one citation needed Based on computer simulations used to evaluate that evolution of language that resulted in showing three stages in the evolution of syntax Neanderthals are thought to have been in stage 2 showing they had something more evolved than proto language but not quite as complex as the language of modern humans Some researchers applying auditory bioengineering models to computerised tomography scans of Neanderthal skulls have asserted that Neanderthals had auditory capacity very similar to that of anatomically modern humans These researchers claim that this finding implies that Neanderthals evolved the auditory capacities to support a vocal communication system as efficient as modern human speech Homo sapiens Anatomically modern humans begin to appear in the fossil record in Ethiopia some 200 000 years ago Although there is still much debate as to whether behavioural modernity emerged in Africa at around the same time a growing number of archaeologists nowadays when invoke the southern African Middle Stone Age use of red ochre pigments for example at Blombos Cave as evidence that modern anatomy and behaviour co evolved These archaeologists argue strongly that if modern humans at this early stage were using red ochre pigments for ritual and symbolic purposes they probably had symbolic language as well According to the recent African origins hypothesis from around 60 000 50 000 years ago a group of humans left Africa and began migrating to occupy the rest of the world carrying language and symbolic culture with them Descended larynx This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message The larynx or voice box is an organ in the neck housing the vocal folds which are responsible for phonation In humans the larynx is descended The human species is not unique in this respect goats dogs pigs and tamarins lower the larynx temporarily to emit loud calls Several deer species have a permanently lowered larynx which may be lowered still further by males during their roaring displays Lions jaguars cheetahs and domestic cats also do this However laryngeal descent in nonhumans according to Philip Lieberman is not accompanied by descent of the hyoid hence the tongue remains horizontal in the oral cavity preventing it from acting as a pharyngeal articulator LarynxAnatomy of the larynx anterolateral viewAnatomical terminology edit on Wikidata Despite all this scholars remain divided as to how special the human vocal tract really is It has been shown that the larynx does descend to some extent during development in chimpanzees followed by hyoidal descent As against this Philip Lieberman points out that only humans have evolved permanent and substantial laryngeal descent in association with hyoidal descent resulting in a curved tongue and two tube vocal tract with 1 1 proportions He argues that Neanderthals and early anatomically modern humans could not have possessed supralaryngeal vocal tracts capable of producing fully human speech Uniquely in the human case simple contact between the epiglottis and velum is no longer possible disrupting the normal mammalian separation of the respiratory and digestive tracts during swallowing Since this entails substantial costs increasing the risk of choking while swallowing food we are forced to ask what benefits might have outweighed those costs The obvious benefit so it is claimed must have been speech But this idea has been vigorously contested One objection is that humans are in fact not seriously at risk of choking on food medical statistics indicate that accidents of this kind are extremely rare Another objection is that in the view of most scholars speech as it is known emerged relatively late in human evolution roughly contemporaneously with the emergence of Homo sapiens A development as complex as the reconfiguration of the human vocal tract would have required much more time implying an early date of origin This discrepancy in timescales undermines the idea that human vocal flexibility was initially driven by selection pressures for speech thus not excluding that it was selected for e g improved singing ability Size exaggeration hypothesis To lower the larynx is to increase the length of the vocal tract in turn lowering formant frequencies so that the voice sounds deeper giving an impression of greater size John Ohala argues that the function of the lowered larynx in humans especially males is probably to enhance threat displays rather than speech itself Ohala points out that if the lowered larynx were an adaptation for speech adult human males would be expected to be better adapted in this respect than adult females whose larynx is considerably less low However females outperform males in verbal tests falsifying this whole line of reasoning W Tecumseh Fitch likewise argues that this was the original selective advantage of laryngeal lowering in the human species Although according to Fitch the initial lowering of the larynx in humans had nothing to do with speech the increased range of possible formant patterns was subsequently co opted for speech Size exaggeration remains the sole function of the extreme laryngeal descent observed in male deer Consistent with the size exaggeration hypothesis a second descent of the larynx occurs at puberty in humans although only in males In response to the objection that the larynx is descended in human females Fitch suggests that mothers vocalizing to protect their infants would also have benefited from this ability Phonemic diversity In 2011 Quentin Atkinson published a survey of phonemes from 500 different languages as well as language families and compared their phonemic diversity by region number of speakers and distance from Africa The survey revealed that African languages had the largest number of phonemes and Oceania and South America had the smallest number After allowing for the number of speakers the phonemic diversity was compared to over 2000 possible origin locations Atkinson s best fit model is that language originated in western central or southern Africa between 80 000 and 160 000 years ago This predates the hypothesized southern coastal peopling of Arabia India southeast Asia and Australia It would also mean that the origin of language occurred at the same time as the emergence of symbolic culture Numerous linguists have criticized Atkinson s paper as misrepresenting both the phonemic data and processes of linguistic change as language complexity does not necessarily correspond to age and of failing to take into account the borrowing of phonemes from neighbouring languages as some Bantu languages have done with click consonants Recreations of his method gave possible origins of language in the Caucasus and Turkmenistan in addition to southern and eastern Africa HistoryIn religion and mythology The Tower of Babel by Pieter Bruegel the Elder 1563 The search for the origin of language has a long history in mythology Most mythologies do not credit humans with the invention of language but speak of a divine language predating human language Mystical languages used to communicate with animals or spirits such as the language of the birds are also common and were of particular interest during the Renaissance Vac is the Hindu goddess of speech or speech personified As Brahman s sacred utterance she has a cosmological role as the Mother of the Vedas The Aztecs story maintains that only a man Coxcox and a woman Xochiquetzal survived a flood having floated on a piece of bark They found themselves on land and had many children who were at first born unable to speak but subsequently upon the arrival of a dove were endowed with language although each one was given a different speech such that they could not understand one another In the Old Testament the Book of Genesis chapter 11 says that God prevented the Tower of Babel from being completed through a miracle that made its construction workers start speaking different languages After this they migrated to other regions grouped together according to which of the newly created languages they spoke explaining the origins of languages and nations outside of the Fertile Crescent Historical experiments History contains a number of anecdotes about people who attempted to discover the origin of language by experiment The first such tale was told by Herodotus Histories 2 2 He relates that Pharaoh Psammetichus probably Psammetichus I 7th century BC had two children raised by a shepherd with the instructions that no one should speak to them but that the shepherd should feed and care for them while listening to determine their first words When one of the children cried bekos with outstretched arms the shepherd concluded that the word was Phrygian because that was the sound of the Phrygian word for bread From this Psammetichus concluded that the first language was Phrygian King James IV of Scotland is said to have tried a similar experiment his children were supposed to have spoken Hebrew Both the medieval monarch Frederick II and Akbar are said to have tried similar experiments the children involved in these experiments did not speak The current situation of deaf people also points into this direction clarification needed History of research Modern linguistics did not begin until the late 18th century and the Romantic or animist theses of Johann Gottfried Herder and Johann Christoph Adelung remained influential well into the 19th century The question of language origin seemed inaccessible to methodical approaches and in 1866 the Linguistic Society of Paris famously banned all discussion of the origin of language deeming it to be an unanswerable problem An increasingly systematic approach to historical linguistics developed in the course of the 19th century reaching its culmination in the Neogrammarian school of Karl Brugmann and others citation needed However scholarly interest in the question of the origin of language has only gradually been rekindled colloquialism from the 1950s on and then controversially with ideas such as universal grammar mass comparison and glottochronology citation needed The origin of language as a subject in its own right emerged from studies in neurolinguistics psycholinguistics and human evolution The Linguistic Bibliography introduced Origin of language as a separate heading in 1988 as a sub topic of psycholinguistics Dedicated research institutes of evolutionary linguistics are a recent phenomenon emerging only in the 1990s See alsoAbiogenesis Biolinguistics Bouba kiki effect Bow wow theory Digital infinity Essay on the Origin of Languages Evolutionary psychology of language FOXP2 and human evolution Generative anthropology Historical linguistics Neurobiological origins of language Origins of society Origin of speech Proto language Theory of languageReferencesThis article contains one or more duplicated citations It is recommended to use named references to consolidate citations that are used multiple times November 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message Shah Sonia 20 September 2023 The Animals Are Talking What Does It Mean The New York Times Archived from the original on 21 September 2023 Retrieved 21 September 2023 Zywiczynski Przemyslaw Wacewicz Slawomir August 2019 Statement of the Societe de linguistique de Paris banning glottogenetic speculation doi 10 3726 b15805 ISBN 978 3 631 79394 7 Tallerman Maggie Gibson Kathleen Rita 2012 The Oxford handbook of language evolution Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 954111 9 Muller F M 1996 1861 The theoretical stage and the origin of language Lecture 9 from Lectures on the Science of Language Reprinted in R Harris ed The Origin of Language Bristol Thoemmes Press pp 7 41 Christiansen Morten H Kirby Simon 2003 Language evolution the hardest problem in science In Christiansen Morten H Kirby Simon eds Language evolution Oxford University Press pp 77 93 ISBN 978 0 19 924484 3 Ulbaek Ib 1998 The origin of language and cognition In Hurford James R Studdert Kennedy Michael Knight Chris eds Approaches to the evolution of language social and cognitive base Cambridge University Press pp 30 43 ISBN 978 0 521 63964 4 Pinker Steven 1994 The Language Instinct New York W Morrow amp Co ISBN 978 0 688 12141 9 Tomasello Michael 1996 The cultural roots of language In Velichkovskiĭ B M Rumbaugh Duane M eds Communicating meaning the evolution and development of language Mahwah NJ L Erlbaum ISBN 978 0 8058 2118 5 Pika Simone Mitani John 2006 Referential gestural communication in wild chimpanzees Pan troglodytes Current Biology 16 6 R191 R192 Bibcode 2006CBio 16 R191P doi 10 1016 j cub 2006 02 037 ISSN 0960 9822 PMID 16546066 S2CID 2273018 Dunn M Greenhill S J Levinson S C Gray R D May 2011 Evolved structure of language shows lineage specific trends in word order universals Nature 473 7345 79 82 Bibcode 2011Natur 473 79D doi 10 1038 nature09923 hdl 11858 00 001M 0000 0013 3B19 B PMID 21490599 S2CID 1588797 The Economist The evolution of language Babel or babble 16 April 2011 pp 85 86 Cross Ian Woodruff Ghofur Eliot 23 April 2009 Music as a Communicative medium In Botha Rudolf P Knight Chris eds The Prehistory of Language PDF Oxford University Press pp 77 98 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199545872 003 0005 ISBN 978 0 19 156287 7 Vaneechoutte Mario 2014 The Origin of Articulate Language Revisited The Potential of a Semi Aquatic Past of Human Ancestors to Explain the Origin of Human Musicality and Articulate Language PDF Human Evolution 29 1 33 How Could Language Have Evolved https doi org 10 1371 journal pbio 1001934 Knight Chris Power Camilla 2012 Social conditions for the evolutionary emergence of language In Tallerman Maggie Gibson Kathleen R eds The Oxford handbook of language evolution PDF Oxford University Press pp 346 349 ISBN 978 0 19 954111 9 Rappaport Roy 1999 Ritual and religion in the making of humanity Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 29690 8 Knight C 2008 Honest fakes and language origins PDF Journal of Consciousness Studies 15 10 11 236 248 Knight Chris 2010 The origins of symbolic culture In Frey Ulrich J Stormer Charlotte Willfuhr Kai P eds Homo Novus a human without illusion PDF Berlin Springer pp 193 211 ISBN 978 3 642 12141 8 Knight Chris 1998 Ritual speech coevolution a solution to the problem of deception In Hurford James R Studdert Kennedy Michael Knight Chris eds Approaches to the evolution of language social and cognitive base PDF Cambridge University Press pp 68 91 ISBN 978 0 521 63964 4 Knight Chris 2006 Language co evolved with the rule of law In Cangelosi Angelo Smith Andrew D M Kenny Smith eds The evolution of language proceedings of the 6th international conference EVOLANG6 Rome Italy 12 15 April 200 PDF World Scientific pp 168 175 ISBN 978 981 256 656 0 Savage Rumbaugh Sue McDonald Kelly 1988 Deception and social manipulation in symbol using apes In Byrne Richard W Whiten Andrew eds Machiavellian intelligence social expertise and the evolution of intellect in monkeys apes and human Oxford Clarendon pp 224 237 ISBN 978 0 19 852175 4 Kegl J A Senghas and M Coppola 1998 Creation through Contact Sign language emergence and sign language change in Nicaragua In M DeGraff ed Language Creation and Change Creolization Diachrony and Development Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press Lieberman P Crelin E S 1971 On the speech of Neandertal Man Linguistic Inquiry 2 203 222 Arensburg B Tillier A M Vandermeersch B Duday H Schepartz L A Rak Y 1989 A Middle Palaeolithic human hyoid bone Nature 338 6218 758 760 Bibcode 1989Natur 338 758A doi 10 1038 338758a0 PMID 2716823 S2CID 4309147 Diller Karl C Cann Rebecca L 2009 Evidence Against a Genetic Based Revolution in Language 50 000 Years Ago In Botha Rudolf P Knight Chris eds The cradle of language Oxford University Press pp 135 149 ISBN 978 0 19 954586 5 Henshilwood Christopher Stuart Dubreuil Benoit 2009 Reading the Artefacts Gleaning Language Skills From the Middle Stone Age in Southern Africa In Botha Rudolf P Knight Chris eds The cradle of language Oxford University Press pp 41 61 ISBN 978 0 19 954586 5 Knight Chris 2009 Language Ochre and the Rule of Law In Rudolf P Botha Chris Knight eds The cradle of language Oxford University Press pp 281 303 ISBN 978 0 19 954586 5 Watts Ian 2009 Red Ochre Body Painting and Language Interpreting the Blombos Ochre In Botha Rudolf P Knight Chris eds The cradle of language Oxford University Press pp 62 92 ISBN 978 0 19 954586 5 Arcadi A C August 2000 Vocal responsiveness in male wild chimpanzees implications for the evolution of language Journal of Human Evolution 39 2 205 223 Bibcode 2000JHumE 39 205A doi 10 1006 jhev 2000 0415 PMID 10968929 S2CID 7403772 Johanna Nichols 1998 The origin and dispersal of languages Linguistic evidence In Nina Jablonski and Leslie C Aiello eds The Origin and Diversification of Language pp 127 70 Memoirs of the California Academy of Sciences 24 San Francisco California Academy of Sciences Botha Rudolf P Knight Chris 2009 The cradle of language Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 954586 5 Darwin C 1871 The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex 2 vols London Murray p 56 Muller F M 1996 1861 The theoretical stage and the origin of language Lecture 9 from Lectures on the Science of Language Reprinted in R Harris ed The Origin of Language Bristol Thoemmes Press pp 7 41 Paget R 1930 Human speech some observations experiments and conclusions as to the nature origin purpose and possible improvement of human speech London Routledge amp Kegan Paul Firth J R 1964 The Tongues of Men and Speech London Oxford University Press pp 25 26 Stam J H 1976 Inquiries into the origins of language New York Harper and Row pp 243 244 Shah Mustafa January 2011 Classical Islamic Discourse on the Origins of Language Cultural Memory and the Defense of Orthodoxy PDF Numen 58 2 3 314 343 doi 10 1163 156852711X562335 S2CID 55165312 via CORE Weiss B 1987 Ilm al wad An Introductory Account of a Later Muslim Philological Science Arabica 34 1 339 356 doi 10 1163 157005887X00054 S2CID 161187751 Weiss B 1974 Medieval Muslim discussions of the origin of language PDF Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenlandischen Gesellschaft 124 1 33 41 doi 10 1163 156852711X562335 JSTOR 43370636 S2CID 55165312 Zahavi A May 1993 The fallacy of conventional signalling Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 340 1292 227 230 Bibcode 1993RSPTB 340 227Z doi 10 1098 rstb 1993 0061 PMID 8101657 Zahavi A and A Zahavi 1997 The Handicap Principle A Missing Piece in Darwin s Puzzle New York and Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780190284589 Smith J Maynard 1994 Must reliable signals always be costly Animal Behaviour 47 5 1115 1120 doi 10 1006 anbe 1994 1149 ISSN 0003 3472 S2CID 54274718 Goodall Jane 1986 The chimpanzees of Gombe patterns of behavior Cambridge MA Belknap ISBN 978 0 674 11649 8 Byrne Richard W Whiten Andrew 1988 Machiavellian intelligence social expertise and the evolution of intellect in monkeys apes and humans Oxford Clarendon ISBN 978 0 19 852175 4 de Waal Frans B M 2005 Intentional Deception in Primates Evolutionary Anthropology 1 3 86 92 doi 10 1002 evan 1360010306 S2CID 221736130 Power Camilla 1998 Old wives tales the gossip hypothesis and the reliability of cheap signals In Hurford James R Studdert Kennedy Michael Chris Knight eds Approaches to the evolution of language social and cognitive base Cambridge University Press pp 111 129 ISBN 978 0 521 63964 4 Fitch W T 2004 Kin selection and mother tongues a neglected component in language evolution PDF In Griebel Ulrike Oller D Kimbrough eds Evolution of communication systems a comparative approach Cambridge MA MIT Press pp 275 296 ISBN 978 0 262 15111 5 Hamilton W D 1964 The genetical evolution of social behaviour I II Journal of Theoretical Biology 7 1 1 52 Bibcode 1964JThBi 7 1H doi 10 1016 0022 5193 64 90038 4 PMID 5875341 S2CID 5310280 Knight Chris 2000 Play as Precursor of Phonology and Syntax The Evolutionary Emergence of Language Cambridge University Press pp 99 120 doi 10 1017 cbo9780511606441 007 ISBN 978 0 521 78157 2 S2CID 56418139 Tallerman Maggie 2013 Kin selection pedagogy and linguistic complexity whence protolanguage In Botha Rudolf P Everaert Martin eds The evolutionary emergence of language evidence and inference Oxford University Press pp 77 96 ISBN 978 0 19 965485 7 Trivers R L 1971 The evolution of reciprocal altruism Quarterly Review of Biology 46 35 57 doi 10 1086 406755 S2CID 19027999 Dessalles Jean L 1998 Altruism status and the origin of relevance In James R Hurford Michael Studdert Kennedy Chris Knight eds Approaches to the evolution of language social and cognitive base Cambridge University Press pp 130 147 ISBN 978 0 521 63964 4 Dunbar R I M 1996 Grooming gossip and the evolution of language London Faber amp Faber ISBN 978 0 571 17396 9 von Heiseler Till Nikolaus 2014 Language evolved for storytelling in a super fast evolution In Cartmill R L C ed Evolution of Language London World Scientific pp 114 121 Power C 1998 Old wives tales the gossip hypothesis and the reliability of cheap signals In Hurford J R Studdert Kennedy M Knight C eds Approaches to the Evolution of Language Social and Cognitive Bases Cambridge University Press pp 111 129 Rappaport R A 1999 Ritual and Religion in the Making of Humanity Cambridge University Press Knight C 1998 Ritual speech coevolution a solution to the problem of deception In J R Hurford M Studdert Kennedy and C Knight eds Approaches to the Evolution of Language Social and cognitive bases Cambridge University Press pp 68 91 Lewis J 2009 As well as words Congo Pygmy hunting mimicry and play In R Botha and C Knight eds The Cradle of Language Oxford Oxford University Press pp 236 256 Enfield N J 2010 Without social context PDF Science 329 5999 1600 1601 Bibcode 2010Sci 329 1600E doi 10 1126 science 1194229 hdl 11858 00 001M 0000 0012 C777 5 S2CID 143530707 Power C 1998 Old wives tales the gossip hypothesis and the reliability of cheap signals In J R Hurford M Studdert Kennedy and C Knight eds Approaches to the Evolution of Language Social and Cognitive Bases Cambridge University Press pp 111 29 Watts I 2009 Red ochre body painting and language interpreting the Blombos ochre In R Botha and C Knight eds The Cradle of Language Oxford Oxford University Press pp 62 92 Steels Luc 2009 Is sociality a crucial prerequisite for the emergence of language In Rudolf P Botha and Chris Knight eds The prehistory of language Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 954587 2 Deacon Terrence William 1997 The symbolic species the co evolution of language and the brain New York W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 03838 5 Boeckx C 2023 What made us hunter gatherers of words Front Neurosci 17 1080861 doi 10 3389 fnins 2023 1080861 Knight C 2010 The origins of symbolic culture In Ulrich J Frey Charlotte Stormer and Kai P Willfuhr eds 2010 Homo Novus A Human Without Illusions Berlin Heidelberg Springer Verlag pp 193 211 Rappaport Roy A 1979 Ecology Meaning and Religion Richmond CA North Atlantic pp 201 211 ISBN 978 0 913028 54 4 Zahavi A 1993 The fallacy of conventional signalling Philosophical Transactions Biological Sciences 340 227 230 published by Royal Society Searle J R 1996 The Construction of Social Reality London Penguin Durkheim E 1947 1915 Origins of these beliefs Chapter VII In E Durkheim The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life A study in religious sociology Trans J W Swain Glencoe Illinois The Free Press pp 205 239 Knight C 2010 The origins of symbolic culture In Ulrich J Frey Charlotte Stormer and Kai P Willfuhr eds 2010 Homo Novus A Human Without Illusions Berlin Heidelberg Springer Verlag pp 193 211 Searle J R 1996 The Construction of Social Reality London Penguin Chomsky Noam 2011 Language and Other Cognitive Systems What is Special About Language Language Learning and Development 7 4 263 278 doi 10 1080 15475441 2011 584041 S2CID 122866773 Chomsky N 2005 Three factors in language design Linguistic Inquiry 36 1 1 22 Uomini Natalie Thais Meyer Georg Friedrich 30 August 2013 Petraglia Michael D ed Shared Brain Lateralization Patterns in Language and Acheulean Stone Tool Production A Functional Transcranial Doppler Ultrasound Study PLOS ONE 8 8 e72693 Bibcode 2013PLoSO 872693U doi 10 1371 journal pone 0072693 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 3758346 PMID 24023634 Stout Dietrich Chaminade Thierry 12 January 2012 Stone tools language and the brain in human evolution Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 367 1585 75 87 doi 10 1098 rstb 2011 0099 PMC 3223784 PMID 22106428 Putt Shelby S J Anwarzai Zara Holden Chloe Ruck Lana Schoenemann P Thomas 4 January 2022 The evolution of combinatoriality and compositionality in hominid tool use a comparative perspective International Journal of Primatology 45 3 589 634 doi 10 1007 s10764 021 00267 7 ISSN 1573 8604 S2CID 245654206 Barham Lawrence Everett Daniel June 2021 Semiotics and the Origin of Language in the Lower Palaeolithic Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 28 2 535 579 doi 10 1007 s10816 020 09480 9 ISSN 1072 5369 S2CID 225509049 Arnauld Antoine Lancelot Claude 1975 1660 General and Rational Grammar The Port Royal Grammar The Hague Mouton ISBN 902793004X 1987 On Prague school functionalism in linguistics In Dirven R Fried V eds Functionalism in Linguistics John Benjamins pp 3 38 ISBN 9789027215246 Aronoff Mark 2017 Darwinism tested by the science of language In Bowern Horn Zanuttini eds On Looking into Words and Beyond Structures Relations Analyses SUNY Press pp 443 456 ISBN 978 3 946234 92 0 Retrieved 3 March 2020 de Saussure Ferdinand 1959 1916 Course in general linguistics PDF New York Philosophy Library ISBN 978 0 231 15727 8 Archived from the original PDF on 8 August 2019 Retrieved 6 May 2020 Levi Strauss Claude 1987 Introduction to the work of Marcel Mauss Routledge pp 59 60 ISBN 0 7100 9066 8 Hejl P M 2013 The importance of the concepts of organism and evolution in Emile Durkheim s division of social labor and the influence of Herbert Spencer In Maasen Sabine Mendelsohn E Weingart P eds Biology as Society Society as Biology Metaphors Springer pp 155 191 ISBN 9789401106733 Chomsky N 2004 Language and Mind Current thoughts on ancient problems Part I amp Part II In Lyle Jenkins ed Variation and Universals in Biolinguistics Amsterdam Elsevier pp 379 405 Chomsky N 2005 Three factors in language design Linguistic Inquiry 36 1 1 22 doi 10 1162 0024389052993655 S2CID 14954986 Berwick Robert Chomsky Noam 2016 Why Only Us Language and Evolution Cambridge MA MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 03424 1 de Boer Bart Thompson Bill Ravignani Andrea Boeckx Cedric 16 January 2020 Evolutionary Dynamics Do Not Motivate a Single Mutant Theory of Human Language Scientific Reports 10 1 451 Bibcode 2020NatSR 10 451D doi 10 1038 s41598 019 57235 8 ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 6965110 PMID 31949223 Martins Pedro Tiago Boeckx Cedric 27 November 2019 Language evolution and complexity considerations The no half Merge fallacy PLOS Biology 17 11 e3000389 doi 10 1371 journal pbio 3000389 ISSN 1545 7885 PMC 6880980 PMID 31774810 Carnie Andrew 2012 Syntax A Generative Introduction 3rd ed West Sussex Wiley Blackwell pp 20 21 ISBN 978 0 470 65531 3 Dediu Dan Levinson Stephen C 2013 On the antiquity of language the reinterpretation of Neandertal linguistic capacities and its consequences Frontiers in Psychology 4 397 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2013 00397 ISSN 1664 1078 PMC 3701805 PMID 23847571 Vyshedskiy Andrey 29 July 2019 Language evolution to revolution the leap from rich vocabulary non recursive communication system to recursive language 70 000 years ago was associated with acquisition of a novel component of imagination called Prefrontal Synthesis enabled by a mutation that slowed down the prefrontal cortex maturation simultaneously in two or more children the Romulus and Remus hypothesis Research Ideas and Outcomes 5 doi 10 3897 rio 5 e38546 ISSN 2367 7163 Bakker Peter July 1987 Autonomous Languages of Twins Acta Geneticae Medicae et Gemellologiae Twin Research 36 2 233 238 doi 10 1017 S0001566000004463 ISSN 0001 5660 PMID 3434134 Amos W Hoffman J I 7 January 2010 Evidence that two main bottleneck events shaped modern human genetic diversity Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 277 1678 131 137 doi 10 1098 rspb 2009 1473 PMC 2842629 PMID 19812086 Premack David amp Premack Ann James The Mind of an Ape ISBN 0 393 01581 5 Pollick A S de Waal F B May 2007 Ape Gestures and Language Evolution Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 104 19 8184 8189 Bibcode 2007PNAS 104 8184P doi 10 1073 pnas 0702624104 PMC 1876592 PMID 17470779 Kimura Doreen 1993 Neuromotor mechanisms in human communication New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 505492 7 Newman A J et al 2002 A Critical Period for Right Hemisphere Recruitment in American Sign Language Processing Nature Neuroscience 5 1 76 80 doi 10 1038 nn775 PMID 11753419 S2CID 2745545 Arbib M A Liebal K Pika S December 2008 Primate vocalization gesture and the evolution of human language Current Anthropology 49 6 1053 1076 doi 10 1086 593015 PMID 19391445 S2CID 18832100 Capone Nina C McGregor Karla K 2004 Gesture Development Journal of Speech Language and Hearing Research 47 1 173 186 doi 10 1044 1092 4388 2004 015 PMID 15072537 S2CID 7244799 Ozcaliskan S Goldin Meadow S July 2005 Gesture is at the cutting edge of early language development Cognition 96 3 B101 B113 doi 10 1016 j cognition 2005 01 001 PMID 15996556 S2CID 206863317 Rizzolatti G 2008 Giacomo Rizzolatti on the Evolution of Language Retrieved from http gocognitive net interviews evolution language gestures full citation needed Kendon Adam February 2017 Reflections on the gesture first hypothesis of language origins Psychonomic Bulletin amp Review 24 1 163 170 doi 10 3758 s13423 016 1117 3 PMC 5325861 PMID 27439503 Corballis Michael C 2002 Wray Alison ed The transition to language Oxford University Press pp 161 179 ISBN 978 0 19 925066 0 Knight Chris 2006 Language co evolved with the rule of law In Cangelosi Angelo Smith Andrew D M Smith Kenny eds The evolution of language proceedings of the 6th international conference EVOLANG6 Rome Italy 12 15 April 200 PDF Vol 7 New Jersey World Scientific pp 109 128 doi 10 1007 s11299 007 0039 1 ISBN 9789812566560 S2CID 143877486 a href wiki Template Cite book title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Knight Chris 2000 Play as precursor of phonology and syntax In Chris Knight Michael Studdert Kennedy James R Hurford eds The Evolutionary emergence of language social function and the origins of linguistic for Cambridge University Press pp 99 1119 ISBN 978 0 521 78157 2 Kolb Bryan amp Ian Q Whishaw 2003 Fundamentals of Human Neuropsychology 5th ed Worth Publishers ISBN 978 0 7167 5300 1 Sandler Wendy amp Lillo Martin Diane 2006 Sign Language and Linguistic Universals Cambridge University Press Meena Ram Lakhan 2021 Current Trends of Applied Linguistics K K Publications p 48 Hewes Gordon W Andrew R J Carini Louis Choe Hackeny Gardner R Allen Kortlandt A Krantz Grover S McBride Glen Nottebohm Fernando Pfeiffer John Rumbaugh Duane G Steklis Horst D Raliegh Michael J Stopa Roman Suzuki Akira Washburn S L Wescott Roger W 1973 Primate Communication and the Gestural Origin of Language and Comments and Reply Current Anthropology 14 1 2 5 24 doi 10 1086 201401 JSTOR 2741093 S2CID 146288708 McNeill David Bertenthal Bennett Cole Jonathan Gallagher Shaun April 2005 Gesture first but no gestures Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28 2 138 139 doi 10 1017 S0140525X05360031 S2CID 51753637 Larsson M 2015 Tool use associated sound in the evolution of language Animal Cognition 18 5 993 1005 doi 10 1007 s10071 015 0885 x PMID 26118672 S2CID 18714154 Larsson M 2014 Self generated sounds of locomotion and ventilation and the evolution of human rhythmic abilities Animal Cognition 17 1 1 14 doi 10 1007 s10071 013 0678 z PMC 3889703 PMID 23990063 Skoyles John R Gesture Language Origins and Right Handedness Psychology 11 24 2000 Petrides M Cadoret G Mackey S June 2005 Orofacial somatomotor responses in the macaque monkey homologue of Broca s area Nature 435 7046 1235 1238 Bibcode 2005Natur 435 1235P doi 10 1038 nature03628 PMID 15988526 S2CID 4397762 Porter R J Lubker J F September 1980 Rapid reproduction of vowel vowel sequences evidence for a fast and direct acoustic motoric linkage in speech Journal of Speech and Hearing Research 23 3 593 602 doi 10 1044 jshr 2303 593 PMID 7421161 McCarthy R Warrington E K June 1984 A two route model of speech production Evidence from aphasia Brain 107 2 463 485 doi 10 1093 brain 107 2 463 PMID 6722512 McCarthy R A Warrington E K 2001 Repeating without semantics surface dysphasia Neurocase 7 1 77 87 doi 10 1093 neucas 7 1 77 PMID 11239078 S2CID 12988855 Marslen Wilson W 1973 Linguistic structure and speech shadowing at very short latencies Nature 244 5417 522 523 Bibcode 1973Natur 244 522M doi 10 1038 244522a0 PMID 4621131 S2CID 4220775 Fay W H Coleman R O July 1977 A human sound transducer reproducer temporal capabilities of a profoundly echolalic child Brain and Language 4 3 396 402 doi 10 1016 0093 934x 77 90034 7 PMID 907878 S2CID 29492873 Schippers M B Roebroeck A Renken R Nanetti L Keysers C 2010 Mapping the Information flow from one brain to another during gestural communication Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 107 20 9388 9393 Bibcode 2010PNAS 107 9388S doi 10 1073 pnas 1001791107 PMC 2889063 PMID 20439736 Moro Andrea 2008 The boundaries of Babel the brain and the enigma of impossible language Cambridge MA MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 13498 9 page needed Falk D August 2004 Prelinguistic evolution in early hominins whence motherese PDF Behavioral and Brain Sciences 27 4 491 583 doi 10 1017 s0140525x04000111 PMID 15773427 S2CID 39547572 Archived from the original PDF on 4 January 2014 Retrieved 4 January 2014 Kaye K 1982 The Mental and Social Life of Babies University of Chicago Press pp 186 ISBN 0 226 42848 6 Poliva Oren 20 September 2017 From where to what a neuroanatomically based evolutionary model of the emergence of speech in humans F1000Research 4 67 doi 10 12688 f1000research 6175 3 ISSN 2046 1402 PMC 5600004 PMID 28928931 Poliva Oren 30 June 2016 From Mimicry to Language A Neuroanatomically Based Evolutionary Model of the Emergence of Vocal Language Frontiers in Neuroscience 10 307 doi 10 3389 fnins 2016 00307 ISSN 1662 453X PMC 4928493 PMID 27445676 Scott S K 1 December 2000 Identification of a pathway for intelligible speech in the left temporal lobe Brain 123 12 2400 2406 doi 10 1093 brain 123 12 2400 ISSN 1460 2156 PMC 5630088 PMID 11099443 Davis Matthew H Johnsrude Ingrid S 15 April 2003 Hierarchical Processing in Spoken Language Comprehension The Journal of Neuroscience 23 8 3423 3431 doi 10 1523 jneurosci 23 08 03423 2003 ISSN 0270 6474 PMC 6742313 PMID 12716950 Petkov Christopher I Kayser Christoph Steudel Thomas Whittingstall Kevin Augath Mark Logothetis Nikos K 10 February 2008 A voice region in the monkey brain Nature Neuroscience 11 3 367 374 doi 10 1038 nn2043 ISSN 1097 6256 PMID 18264095 S2CID 5505773 Buchsbaum Bradley R Baldo Juliana Okada Kayoko Berman Karen F Dronkers Nina D Esposito Mark Hickok Gregory December 2011 Conduction aphasia sensory motor integration and phonological short term memory An aggregate analysis of lesion and fMRI data Brain and Language 119 3 119 128 doi 10 1016 j bandl 2010 12 001 ISSN 0093 934X PMC 3090694 PMID 21256582 Warren Jane E Wise Richard J S Warren Jason D December 2005 Sounds do able auditory motor transformations and the posterior temporal plane Trends in Neurosciences 28 12 636 643 doi 10 1016 j tins 2005 09 010 ISSN 0166 2236 PMID 16216346 S2CID 36678139 Campbell Ruth 12 March 2008 The processing of audio visual speech empirical and neural bases Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B Biological Sciences 363 1493 1001 1010 doi 10 1098 rstb 2007 2155 ISSN 0962 8436 PMC 2606792 PMID 17827105 Kayser Christoph Petkov Christopher I Logothetis Nikos K December 2009 Multisensory interactions in primate auditory cortex fMRI and electrophysiology Hearing Research 258 1 2 80 88 doi 10 1016 j heares 2009 02 011 ISSN 0378 5955 PMID 19269312 S2CID 31412246 Hickok Gregory Buchsbaum Bradley Humphries Colin Muftuler Tugan 1 July 2003 Auditory Motor Interaction Revealed by fMRI Speech Music and Working Memory in Area Spt Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 15 5 673 682 doi 10 1162 089892903322307393 ISSN 1530 8898 PMID 12965041 Schwartz M F Faseyitan O Kim J Coslett H B 20 November 2012 The dorsal stream contribution to phonological retrieval in object naming Brain 135 12 3799 3814 doi 10 1093 brain aws300 ISSN 0006 8950 PMC 3525060 PMID 23171662 Gow David W June 2012 The cortical organization of lexical knowledge A dual lexicon model of spoken language processing Brain and Language 121 3 273 288 doi 10 1016 j bandl 2012 03 005 ISSN 0093 934X PMC 3348354 PMID 22498237 Buchsbaum Bradley R D Esposito Mark May 2008 The Search for the Phonological Store From Loop to Convolution Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 20 5 762 778 doi 10 1162 jocn 2008 20501 ISSN 0898 929X PMID 18201133 S2CID 17878480 Lachaux Jean Philippe Jerbi Karim Bertrand Olivier Minotti Lorella Hoffmann Dominique Schoendorff Benjamin Kahane Philippe 31 October 2007 A Blueprint for Real Time Functional Mapping via Human Intracranial Recordings PLOS ONE 2 10 e1094 Bibcode 2007PLoSO 2 1094L doi 10 1371 journal pone 0001094 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 2040217 PMID 17971857 Jardri Renaud Houfflin Debarge Veronique Delion Pierre Pruvo Jean Pierre Thomas Pierre Pins Delphine April 2012 Assessing fetal response to maternal speech using a noninvasive functional brain imaging technique International Journal of Developmental Neuroscience 30 2 159 161 doi 10 1016 j ijdevneu 2011 11 002 ISSN 0736 5748 PMID 22123457 S2CID 2603226 Petersen M Beecher M Zoloth Moody D Stebbins W 20 October 1978 Neural lateralization of species specific vocalizations by Japanese macaques Macaca fuscata Science 202 4365 324 327 Bibcode 1978Sci 202 324P doi 10 1126 science 99817 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 99817 Heffner H Heffner R 5 October 1984 Temporal lobe lesions and perception of species specific vocalizations by macaques Science 226 4670 75 76 Bibcode 1984Sci 226 75H doi 10 1126 science 6474192 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 6474192 Shu W Cho J Y Jiang Y Zhang M Weisz D Elder G A Schmeidler J De Gasperi R Sosa M A G 27 June 2005 Altered ultrasonic vocalization in mice with a disruption in the Foxp2 gene Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 102 27 9643 9648 Bibcode 2005PNAS 102 9643S doi 10 1073 pnas 0503739102 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 1160518 PMID 15983371 Sia G M Clem R L Huganir R L 31 October 2013 The Human Language Associated Gene SRPX2 Regulates Synapse Formation and Vocalization in Mice Science 342 6161 987 991 Bibcode 2013Sci 342 987S doi 10 1126 science 1245079 ISSN 0036 8075 PMC 3903157 PMID 24179158 Sperber D and D Wilson 1986 Relevance Communication and cognition Oxford Blackwell Deutscher Guy 2005 The unfolding of language an evolutionary tour of mankind s greatest invention New York Metropolitan ISBN 978 0 8050 7907 4 Hopper P J 1998 Emergent grammar In M Tomasello ed The New Psychology of Language Mahwah NJ Lawrence Erlbaum 155 175 Heine Bernd Kuteva Tania 2007 The genesis of grammar a reconstructio Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 922777 8 Lakoff G and M Johnson 1980 Metaphors We Live By Chicago University of Chicago Press Heine Bernd Kuteva Tania 2012 Grammaticalization theory as a tool for reconstructing language evolution In Maggie Tallerman Kathleen R Gibson eds The Oxford handbook of language evolution Oxford University Press pp 512 527 ISBN 978 0 19 954111 9 Cheney Dorothy L Seyfarth Robert M 2005 Constraints and preadaptations in the earliest stages of language evolution PDF The Linguistic Review 22 2 4 135 159 doi 10 1515 tlir 2005 22 2 4 135 S2CID 18939193 Maynard Smith John Harper David 2003 Animal signals New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 852684 1 Davidson R D 1979 What metaphors mean In S Sacks ed On Metaphor Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 29 45 Lakoff G and R Nunez 2000 Where mathematics comes from New York Basic Books Gallup G G Jr 1970 Chimpanzees Self recognition Science 167 3914 86 87 Bibcode 1970Sci 167 86G doi 10 1126 science 167 3914 86 PMID 4982211 S2CID 145295899 Mitchell R W 1995 Evidence of dolphin self recognition and the difficulties of interpretation Consciousness and Cognition 4 2 229 234 doi 10 1006 ccog 1995 1029 PMID 8521261 S2CID 45507064 Ko Kwang Hyun 2016 Origins of human intelligence The chain of tool making and brain evolution PDF Anthropological Notebooks 22 1 5 22 Soma M Hiraiwa Hasegawa M Okanoya K 2009 Early ontogenetic effects on song quality in the Bengalese finch Lonchura striata var domestica laying order sibling competition and song syntax Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 63 3 363 370 Bibcode 2009BEcoS 63 363S doi 10 1007 s00265 008 0670 9 S2CID 23137306 Ritchie Graham Kirby Simon 2005 Selection domestication and the emergence of learned communication systems PDF Second International Symposium on the Emergence and Evolution of Linguistic Communication Archived from the original PDF on 21 January 2012 MacNeilage P 1998 Evolution of the mechanism of language output comparative neurobiology of vocal and manual communication In J R Hurford M Studdert Kennedy and C Knight eds Approaches to the Evolution of Language Cambridge University Press pp 222 41 clarify Hauser M D Chomsky N Fitch W T November 2002 The faculty of language what is it who has it and how did it evolve PDF Science 298 5598 1569 1579 doi 10 1126 science 298 5598 1569 PMID 12446899 Archived from the original PDF on 28 December 2013 Everett Daniel L 2005 Cultural Constraints on Grammar and Cognition in Piraha Another Look at the Design Features of Human Language PDF Current Anthropology 46 4 621 646 doi 10 1086 431525 hdl 2066 41103 S2CID 2223235 Zhordania I M 2006 Who asked the first question the origins of human choral singing intelligence language and speech Tbilisi Georgia Logos Tbilisi Ivane Javakhishvili State University ISBN 9789994031818 Savage Rumbaugh E Sue Murphy Jeannine Sevcik Rose A Brakke Karen E Williams Shelly L Rumbaugh Duane M Bates Elizabeth 1993 Language Comprehension in Ape and Child Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development 58 3 4 i 252 doi 10 2307 1166068 JSTOR 1166068 PMID 8366872 Bolinger Dwight L Editor 1972 Intonation Selected Readings Harmondsworth Penguin p 314 Cruttenden Alan 1986 Intonation Cambridge University Press pp 169 174 ISBN 978 0 521 26028 2 Lee Hye Sook 2008 Non rising questions in North Keyonsang Korean in Proc Speech Prosody 2008 p 241 Retrieved 26 August 2024 Tomasello Michael Call Josep Hare Brian April 2003 Chimpanzees understand psychological states the question is which ones and to what extent Trends in Cognitive Sciences 7 4 153 156 doi 10 1016 S1364 6613 03 00035 4 PMID 12691762 S2CID 3390980 Hale Courtney Melinda Tager Flusberg Helen June 2003 The influence of language on theory of mind a training study Developmental Science 6 3 346 359 doi 10 1111 1467 7687 00289 PMC 1350918 PMID 16467908 Matsuzawa Tetsuro 1985 Use of numbers by a chimpanzee Nature 315 6014 57 59 Bibcode 1985Natur 315 57M doi 10 1038 315057a0 PMID 3990808 S2CID 4361089 Cheung Pierina Rubenson Miriam Barner David February 2017 To infinity and beyond Children generalize the successor function to all possible numbers years after learning to count Cognitive Psychology 92 22 36 doi 10 1016 j cogpsych 2016 11 002 PMID 27889550 S2CID 206867905 via Science Direct Carey Susan 2001 Cognitive Foundations of Arithmetic Evolution and Ontogenisis PDF Mind and Language 16 1 37 55 doi 10 1111 1468 0017 00155 Archived from the original PDF on 25 July 2013 Retrieved 13 January 2014 Hockett Charles F 1960 The Origin of Speech PDF Scientific American 203 3 88 96 Bibcode 1960SciAm 203c 88H doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0960 88 PMID 14402211 Archived from the original PDF on 6 January 2014 Retrieved 6 January 2014 Schlenker Philippe Chemla Emmanuel Arnold Kate Lemasson Alban Ouattara Karim Keenan Sumir Stephan Claudia Ryder Robin Zuberbuhler Klaus December 2014 Monkey semantics two dialects of Campbell s monkey alarm calls Linguistics and Philosophy 37 6 439 501 doi 10 1007 s10988 014 9155 7 S2CID 3428900 Diamond Jared M 1992 Bridges to human language The third chimpanzee the evolution and future of the human animal New York HarperCollins pp 141 167 ISBN 978 0 06 018307 3 Savage Rumbaugh E Sue Lewin Roger 1994 Kanzi the ape at the brink of the human mind New York Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 58591 6 Savage Rumbaugh E Sue Shanker Stuart Taylor Talbot J 1998 Apes language and the human mind New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 510986 3 Freeman Scott Jon C Herron Evolutionary Analysis 4th ed Pearson Education Inc 2007 ISBN 0 13 227584 8 pages 789 90 Seyfarth Robert M Cheney Dorothy L Marler Peter 1980 Vervet monkey alarm calls Semantic communication in a free ranging primate Animal Behaviour 28 4 1070 1094 doi 10 1016 S0003 3472 80 80097 2 S2CID 53165940 Arnold Kate Zuberbuhler Klaus 2006 Language evolution Semantic combinations in primate calls Nature 441 7091 303 Bibcode 2006Natur 441 303A doi 10 1038 441303a PMID 16710411 S2CID 4413635 Wade Nicholas 23 May 2006 Nigerian Monkeys Drop Hints on Language Origin The New York Times Retrieved 9 September 2007 Gibbons Christopher M 2007 The referentiality of chimpanzee vocal signaling behavioral and acoustic analysis of food barks Thesis Ohio State University Slocombe Katie E Zuberbuhler Klaus 2005 Functionally Referential Communication in a Chimpanzee PDF Current Biology 15 19 1779 1784 Bibcode 2005CBio 15 1779S doi 10 1016 j cub 2005 08 068 PMID 16213827 S2CID 6774592 Clark Gary Henneberg Maciej 2017 Ardipithecus ramidus and the evolution of language and singing An early origin for hominin vocal capability HOMO 68 2 101 121 doi 10 1016 j jchb 2017 03 001 PMID 28363458 Aronoff Mark Rees Miller Janie 2001 The handbook of linguistics Malden MA Blackwell ISBN 0 631 20497 0 Fitch W Tecumseh 2000 The evolution of speech a comparative review Trends in Cognitive Sciences 4 7 258 267 doi 10 1016 S1364 6613 00 01494 7 PMID 10859570 S2CID 14706592 Ohala John J 10 September 1987 Experimental Phonology Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society 13 207 doi 10 3765 bls v13i0 1803 ISSN 2377 1666 Cataldo D M Migliano A B Vinicius L 19 January 2018 Speech stone tool making and the evolution of language PLOS ONE 13 1 e0191071 Bibcode 2018PLoSO 1391071C doi 10 1371 journal pone 0191071 PMC 5774752 PMID 29351319 Mithen Steven J 2006 The singing neanderthals the origins of music language mind and body Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 02192 1 Barham Lawrence Everett Daniel 1 June 2021 Semiotics and the Origin of Language in the Lower Palaeolithic Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 28 2 535 579 doi 10 1007 s10816 020 09480 9 ISSN 1573 7764 S2CID 225509049 Vicari Giuseppe Adenzato Mauro May 2014 Is recursion language specific Evidence of recursive mechanisms in the structure of intentional action Consciousness and Cognition 26 169 188 doi 10 1016 j concog 2014 03 010 hdl 2318 154505 PMID 24762973 S2CID 206955548 Corballis Michael 2007 The Uniqueness of Human Recursive Thinking American Scientist 95 3 240 doi 10 1511 2007 65 240 ISSN 0003 0996 Everett Daniel L August 2005 Cultural Constraints on Grammar and Cognition in Piraha Another Look at the Design Features of Human Language Current Anthropology 46 4 621 646 doi 10 1086 431525 hdl 2066 41103 ISSN 0011 3204 S2CID 2223235 Arensburg B Schepartz L A Tillier A M Vandermeersch B Rak Y October 1990 A reappraisal of the anatomical basis for speech in Middle Palaeolithic hominids American Journal of Physical Anthropology 83 2 137 146 doi 10 1002 ajpa 1330830202 PMID 2248373 D Anastasio R Wroe S Tuniz C Mancini L Cesana D T Dreossi D Ravichandiran M Attard M et al 2013 Micro biomechanics of the kebara 2 hyoid and its implications for speech in neanderthals PLOS ONE 8 12 e82261 Bibcode 2013PLoSO 882261D doi 10 1371 journal pone 0082261 PMC 3867335 PMID 24367509 Jungers W L Pokempner A A Kay R F Cartmill M August 2003 Hypoglossal canal size in living hominoids and the evolution of human speech PDF Human Biology 75 4 473 484 doi 10 1353 hub 2003 0057 PMID 14655872 S2CID 30777048 Archived from the original PDF on 12 June 2007 DeGusta D Gilbert W H Turner S P February 1999 Hypoglossal canal size and hominid speech Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 96 4 1800 1804 Bibcode 1999PNAS 96 1800D doi 10 1073 pnas 96 4 1800 PMC 15600 PMID 9990105 Johansson Sverker April 2006 Constraining the Time when Language Evolved PDF Evolution of Language Sixth International Conference Rome pp 152 159 doi 10 1142 9789812774262 0020 ISBN 9789812566560 Archived from the original on 15 October 2006 Retrieved 10 September 2007 Houghton P February 1993 Neandertal supralaryngeal vocal tract American Journal of Physical Anthropology 90 2 139 146 doi 10 1002 ajpa 1330900202 PMID 8430750 Boe Louis Jean Maeda Shinji Heim Jean Louis 1999 Neandertal man was not morphologically handicapped for speech Evolution of Communication 3 1 49 77 doi 10 1075 eoc 3 1 05boe de Boer Bart 2017 Evolution of speech and evolution of language Psychonomic Bulletin amp Review 24 1 158 162 doi 10 3758 s13423 016 1130 6 ISSN 1069 9384 Klarreich E 2004 Biography of Richard G Klein Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 101 16 5705 5707 Bibcode 2004PNAS 101 5705K doi 10 1073 pnas 0402190101 PMC 395972 PMID 15079069 Klein Richard G Three Distinct Human Populations Biological and Behavioral Origins of Modern Humans Access Excellence The National Health Museum Retrieved 10 September 2007 Marwick Ben 2003 Pleistocene Exchange Networks as Evidence for the Evolution of Language Cambridge Archaeological Journal 13 67 81 doi 10 1017 S0959774303000040 hdl 1885 42089 S2CID 15514627 Conde Valverde Mercedes Martinez Ignacio Quam Rolf M Rosa Manuel Velez Alex D Lorenzo Carlos Jarabo Pilar Bermudez de Castro Jose Maria Carbonell Eudald Arsuaga Juan Luis 1 March 2021 Neanderthals and Homo sapiens had similar auditory and speech capacities Nature Ecology amp Evolution 5 5 609 615 Bibcode 2021NatEE 5 609C doi 10 1038 s41559 021 01391 6 ISSN 2397 334X PMID 33649543 S2CID 232090739 Fleagle John G Assefa Zelalem Brown Francis H Shea John J 2008 Paleoanthropology of the Kibish Formation southern Ethiopia Introduction Journal of Human Evolution 55 3 360 365 Bibcode 2008JHumE 55 360F doi 10 1016 j jhevol 2008 05 007 PMID 18617219 Henshilwood C S d Errico F Yates R Jacobs Z Tribolo C Duller G A T Mercier N Sealy J C Valladas H Watts I Wintle A G 2002 Emergence of modern human behavior Middle Stone Age engravings from South Africa Science 295 5558 1278 1280 Bibcode 2002Sci 295 1278H doi 10 1126 science 1067575 PMID 11786608 S2CID 31169551 Minkel J R 18 July 2007 Skulls Add to Out of Africa Theory of Human Origins Pattern of skull variation bolsters the case that humans took over from earlier species Scientific American com Retrieved 9 September 2007 Chris Stringer 2011 The Origin of Our Species London Penguin Fitch W T 2000 The phonetic potential of nonhuman vocal tracts comparative cineradiographic observations of vocalizing animals Phonetica 57 2 4 205 218 doi 10 1159 000028474 PMID 10992141 S2CID 202652500 Fitch W T Reby D August 2001 The descended larynx is not uniquely human Proceedings of the Royal Society B 268 1477 1669 1675 doi 10 1098 rspb 2001 1704 PMC 1088793 PMID 11506679 Weissengruber G E Forstenpointner G Peters G Kubber Heiss A Fitch W T September 2002 Hyoid apparatus and pharynx in the lion Panthera leo jaguar Panthera onca tiger Panthera tigris cheetah Acinonyxjubatus and domestic cat Felis silvestris f catus Journal of Anatomy 201 3 195 209 doi 10 1046 j 1469 7580 2002 00088 x PMC 1570911 PMID 12363272 Lieberman Philip 2007 The Evolution of Human Speech Its Anatomical and Neural Bases PDF Current Anthropology 48 1 39 66 doi 10 1086 509092 S2CID 28651524 Archived from the original PDF on 11 June 2014 Retrieved 3 May 2009 Nishimura T Mikami A Suzuki J Matsuzawa T September 2006 Descent of the hyoid in chimpanzees evolution of face flattening and speech Journal of Human Evolution 51 3 244 254 Bibcode 2006JHumE 51 244N doi 10 1016 j jhevol 2006 03 005 PMID 16730049 Lieberman Philip McCarthy Robert C Strait David 2006 The Recent Origin of Human Speech The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 119 5 3441 Bibcode 2006ASAJ 119 3441L doi 10 1121 1 4786937 M Clegg 2001 The Comparative Anatomy and Evolution of the Human Vocal Tract Unpublished thesis University of London Perreault C Mathew S 2012 Dating the origin of language using phonemic diversity PLOS ONE 7 4 e35289 Bibcode 2012PLoSO 735289P doi 10 1371 journal pone 0035289 PMC 3338724 PMID 22558135 John J Ohala 2000 The irrelevance of the lowered larynx in modern Man for the development of speech Paris ENST The Evolution of Language pp 171 172 Barel Efrat Tzischinsky Orna June 2018 Age and Sex Differences in Verbal and Visuospatial Abilities Advances in Cognitive Psychology 2 14 51 61 doi 10 5709 acp 0238 x PMC 7186802 PMID 32362962 Fitch W T 2002 Comparative vocal production and the evolution of speech Reinterpreting the descent of the larynx In A Wray ed The Transition to Language Oxford Oxford University Press pp 21 45 Atkinson Quentin 2011 Phonemic Diversity Supports a Serial Founder Effect Model of Language Expansion from Africa PDF Science Magazine 332 6027 346 349 Bibcode 2011Sci 332 346A doi 10 1126 science 1199295 PMID 21493858 S2CID 42021647 Retrieved 9 July 2017 Cysouw Michael Dediu Dan Moran Steven 10 February 2012 Comment on Phonemic Diversity Supports a Serial Founder Effect Model of Language Expansion from Africa Science 335 6069 657 Bibcode 2012Sci 335 657C doi 10 1126 science 1208841 hdl 11858 00 001M 0000 0012 1937 4 PMID 22323802 Wang Chuan Chao Ding Qi Liang Tao Huan Li Hui 10 February 2012 Comment on Phonemic Diversity Supports a Serial Founder Effect Model of Language Expansion from Africa Science 335 6069 657 Bibcode 2012Sci 335 657W doi 10 1126 science 1207846 PMID 22323803 S2CID 31360222 Retrieved 22 October 2023 Pereltsvaig Asya Van Tuyl Rory 10 February 2012 Comment on Phonemic Diversity Supports a Serial Founder Effect Model of Language Expansion from Africa Science 335 6069 657 Bibcode 2012Sci 335 657V doi 10 1126 science 1209176 PMID 22323804 Retrieved 22 October 2023 Turner P and Russell Coulter C 2001 Dictionary of Ancient Deities Oxford OUP Pennock Robert T 2000 Tower of Babel The Evidence against the New Creationism Bradford ISBN 978 0 262 66165 2 Lindsay Robert 1728 The history of Scotland from 21 February 1436 to March 1565 In which are contained accounts of many remarkable passages altogether differing from our other historians and many facts are related either concealed by some or omitted by others Baskett amp Co p 104 Meena Ram Lakhan 3 August 2021 Current Trends of Applied Linguistics K K Publications Retrieved 9 January 2022 Further readingThis article contains one or more duplicated citations It is recommended to use named references to consolidate citations that are used multiple times November 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message Allott Robin 1989 The Motor Theory of Language Origin Sussex England Book Guild ISBN 978 0 86332 359 1 Armstrong David F Stokoe William C Wilcox Sherman E 1995 Gesture and the Nature of Language Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 46772 8 Botha Rudolf P Everaert Martin eds 2013 The Evolutionary Emergence of Language Evidence and Inference Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 965484 0 Botha Rudolf P Knight Chris 2009 The Prehistory of Language Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 954587 2 Burling Robbins 2005 The Talking Ape How Language Evolved Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 927940 1 Cangelosi Angelo Greco Alberto Harnad Stevan 2002 Symbol Grounding and the Symbolic Theft Hypothesis In Cangelosi Angelo Parisi Domenico eds Simulating the Evolution of Language London New York Springer ISBN 978 1 85233 428 4 Corballis Michael C 2002 From Hand to Mouth The Origins of Language Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 08803 7 Crystal David 1997 The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Language Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 55967 6 de Grolier E ed 1983 The Origin and Evolution of Language Paris Harwood Academic Publishers Dessalles J L 2007 Why We Talk The Evolutionary Origins of Language Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199563463 Dor Dan Knight Chris Lewis Jerome 2015 The Social Origins of Language Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 966533 4 Dunbar Robin Ian MacDonald Knight Chris Power Camilla 1999 The Evolution of Culture An Interdisciplinary View Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 1076 1 Everett Daniel L 2017 How Language Began The Story of Humanity s Greatest Invention New York Liveright ISBN 978 0 87140 795 5 Fitch W Tecumseh 2010 The Evolution of Language Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 67736 3 Givon Talmy Malle Bertram F 2002 The Evolution of Language out of Pre Language John Benjamins ISBN 978 1 58811 237 8 Harnad Stevan R 1976 Steklis Horst D Lancaster Jane eds Origins and Evolution of Language and Speech Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences v 280 New York New York Academy of Sciences ISBN 0 89072 026 6 Hillert Dieter 2014 The Nature of Language Evolution Paradigms and Circuits New York Springer Nature

rec-icon Recommended Topics
Share this article
Read the free encyclopedia and learn everything...
See more
Read the free encyclopedia. All information in Wikipedia is available. No payment required.
Share this article on
Share
XXX 0C
Saturday, 08 February, 2025
Follow Us On