We propose a novel account for the emergence of human language syntax. Like many evolutionary innovations, language arose from the adventitious combination of two pre-existing, simpler systems that had been evolved for other functional tasks. The first system, Type E(xpression), is found in birdsong, where it marks territory, mating availability, and similar ‘expressive’ functions. The second system, Type L(exical), has been suggestively found in non-human primate calls and in honeybee waggle dances, where it demarcates predicates with one or more ‘arguments,’ such as combinations of calls in monkeys or compass headings set to sun position in honeybees. We show that human language syntax is composed of two layers that parallel these two ind...
Following the observation that vervet monkeys are capable of labelling different predator types with...
The study of the origins of language has been the interest of several ungrounded debates which have ...
Languages tend to encode events from the perspective of agents, placing them first and in simpler fo...
Human language shows combinatoriality in its phonology (both in speech and in sign language) and its...
Syntax has been found in animal communication but only humans appear to have generative, hierarchica...
A key step in understanding the evolution of human language involves unravelling the origins of lang...
In 1980, Robert Seyfarth, Dorothy Cheney and Peter Marler published a landmark paper in Science clai...
How did the biological, brain and behavioural structures underlying human language evolve? When, why...
For many years the evolution of language has been seen as a disreputable topic, mired in fanciful &q...
What are the “design features ” of human language that need to be explained? Starting from R. Jack-e...
This chapter emphasises the role of psychology in language evolution, but claims that it was the sep...
A key step in understanding the evolution of human language involves unravelling the origins of lang...
who has it, and how did it evolve?”, and the volume is in fact based on a conference on language evo...
A recent study by Fitch and Hauser reported that finite-state grammars can be learned by non-human p...
Linguists interested in language evolution tend to focus on combinatorial features and rightly point...
Following the observation that vervet monkeys are capable of labelling different predator types with...
The study of the origins of language has been the interest of several ungrounded debates which have ...
Languages tend to encode events from the perspective of agents, placing them first and in simpler fo...
Human language shows combinatoriality in its phonology (both in speech and in sign language) and its...
Syntax has been found in animal communication but only humans appear to have generative, hierarchica...
A key step in understanding the evolution of human language involves unravelling the origins of lang...
In 1980, Robert Seyfarth, Dorothy Cheney and Peter Marler published a landmark paper in Science clai...
How did the biological, brain and behavioural structures underlying human language evolve? When, why...
For many years the evolution of language has been seen as a disreputable topic, mired in fanciful &q...
What are the “design features ” of human language that need to be explained? Starting from R. Jack-e...
This chapter emphasises the role of psychology in language evolution, but claims that it was the sep...
A key step in understanding the evolution of human language involves unravelling the origins of lang...
who has it, and how did it evolve?”, and the volume is in fact based on a conference on language evo...
A recent study by Fitch and Hauser reported that finite-state grammars can be learned by non-human p...
Linguists interested in language evolution tend to focus on combinatorial features and rightly point...
Following the observation that vervet monkeys are capable of labelling different predator types with...
The study of the origins of language has been the interest of several ungrounded debates which have ...
Languages tend to encode events from the perspective of agents, placing them first and in simpler fo...