The integration hypothesis of human language evolution and the nature of contemporary languages
How human language arose is a mystery in the evolution of Homo sapiens. Miyagawa et al. (2013) put forward a proposal, which we will call the Integration Hypothesis of human language evolution, that holds that human language is composed of two components, E for expressive, and L for lexical. Each co...
Main Authors: | , , , |
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Other Authors: | , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Frontiers Research Foundation,
2014-06-11T15:31:43Z.
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Online Access: | Get fulltext |
Summary: | How human language arose is a mystery in the evolution of Homo sapiens. Miyagawa et al. (2013) put forward a proposal, which we will call the Integration Hypothesis of human language evolution, that holds that human language is composed of two components, E for expressive, and L for lexical. Each component has an antecedent in nature: E as found, for example, in birdsong, and L in, for example, the alarm calls of monkeys. E and L integrated uniquely in humans to give rise to language. A challenge to the Integration Hypothesis is that while these non-human systems are finite-state in nature, human language is known to require characterization by a non-finite state grammar. Our claim is that E and L, taken separately, are in fact finite-state; when a grammatical process crosses the boundary between E and L, it gives rise to the non-finite state character of human language. We provide empirical evidence for the Integration Hypothesis by showing that certain processes found in contemporary languages that have been characterized as non-finite state in nature can in fact be shown to be finite-state. We also speculate on how human language actually arose in evolution through the lens of the Integration Hypothesis. Japan. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT Grants-in-Aid for the Scientific Research (No. 23240033)) Japan. Research Development Corporation. Exploratory Research for Advanced Technology Japan. Science and Technology Agency Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Internal funding) |
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