This paper proposes a Complexity Covariance Hypothesis, whereby linguistic complexity covaries with cultural and socio-political complexity, and argues for an Evolutionary Inference Principle, in accordance with which, in domains where linguistic complexity correlates positively with cultural/socio-political complexity, simpler linguistic structures are evolutionarily prior to their more complex counterparts. Applying this methodology in a case study, the covariance of linguistic and cultural/socio-political complexity is examined by means of a cross-linguistic survey of tense–aspect–mood (TAM) marking in a worldwide sample of 868 languages. A novel empirical finding emerges: all else being equal, languages from small language families tend...
Recent work has cast doubt on the idea that all languages are equally complex; however, the notion o...
Morphological complexity is widely believed to increase with sociolinguistic isolation, and to decre...
SummaryThe task of unravelling the remarkable development of human languages has become more complex...
This paper proposes a Complexity Covariance Hypothesis, whereby linguistic complexity covaries with ...
Language is the best example of a cultural evolutionary system, able to retain a phylogenetic signal...
The nature of the human language faculty is the same the world over, and has been so ever since huma...
In evolutionary linguistics (not to be confused with biolinguistics) (Steels 2011), languages are co...
The present article is aimed at challenging the statement that all languages are equally complex by ...
The article focuses on the hypothesis that the structural complexity of languages is variable and hi...
Languages are culturally transmitted through a repeated cycle of learning and communicative interac...
Nouns and verbs are known to differ in the types of grammatical information they encode. What is les...
Languages differ greatly both in their syntactic and morphological systems and in the social environ...
Languages evolve, adapting to pressures arising from their learning and use. As these pressures may...
The progressive evolution of the biological capacity to learn and use highly complex language is unl...
BACKGROUND: Languages differ greatly both in their syntactic and morphological systems and in the so...
Recent work has cast doubt on the idea that all languages are equally complex; however, the notion o...
Morphological complexity is widely believed to increase with sociolinguistic isolation, and to decre...
SummaryThe task of unravelling the remarkable development of human languages has become more complex...
This paper proposes a Complexity Covariance Hypothesis, whereby linguistic complexity covaries with ...
Language is the best example of a cultural evolutionary system, able to retain a phylogenetic signal...
The nature of the human language faculty is the same the world over, and has been so ever since huma...
In evolutionary linguistics (not to be confused with biolinguistics) (Steels 2011), languages are co...
The present article is aimed at challenging the statement that all languages are equally complex by ...
The article focuses on the hypothesis that the structural complexity of languages is variable and hi...
Languages are culturally transmitted through a repeated cycle of learning and communicative interac...
Nouns and verbs are known to differ in the types of grammatical information they encode. What is les...
Languages differ greatly both in their syntactic and morphological systems and in the social environ...
Languages evolve, adapting to pressures arising from their learning and use. As these pressures may...
The progressive evolution of the biological capacity to learn and use highly complex language is unl...
BACKGROUND: Languages differ greatly both in their syntactic and morphological systems and in the so...
Recent work has cast doubt on the idea that all languages are equally complex; however, the notion o...
Morphological complexity is widely believed to increase with sociolinguistic isolation, and to decre...
SummaryThe task of unravelling the remarkable development of human languages has become more complex...