The aim of this paper is to mount a challenge to gesture-first hypotheses about the evolution of language by identifying constraints on the emergence of symbol use. Current debates focus on a range of pre-conditions for the emergence of language, including co-operation and related mentalising capacities, imitation and tool use, episodic memory, and vocal physiology, but little specifically on the ability to learn and understand symbols. It is argued here that such a focus raises new questions about the plausibility of gesture-first hypotheses, and so about the evolution of language in general. After a brief review of the methodology used in the paper, it is argued that existing uses of gesture in hominid communities may have prohibited the ...
One of the major problems concerning the evolution of human language is to understand how sounds bec...
Comparative psychology provides important contributions to our understanding of the origins of huma...
Linguistic communication requires speakers to mutually agree on the meanings of words, but how does ...
The aim of this paper is to mount a challenge to gesture-first hypotheses about the evolution of lan...
Gesture-first theories of language origins often raise two unsubstantiated arguments against vocal o...
This paper defends a gestural origins hypothesis about the evolution of enhanced communication and l...
Scholars have often reasoned that vocalizations are extremely limited in their potential for iconic ...
a b s t r a c t Language can be understood as an embodied system, expressible as gestures. Perceptio...
It has been a popular view to propose that gesture preceded and paved the way for the evolution of (...
International audienceInvestigating in depth the mechanisms underlying human and non‐human primate i...
The origin of language has been a mystery for many years, with many possible theories offered as an ...
The main lines of evidence taken as support for the “gesture-first” hypothesis of language origins a...
Using a naturalistic video database, we examined whether gestures scaffold the symbolic development ...
This proposal presents an evolutionary analysis of three types of co-speech gestures: symbolic emble...
Iconic gestures are hypothesized to be c rucial to the evolution of language. Yet the important ques...
One of the major problems concerning the evolution of human language is to understand how sounds bec...
Comparative psychology provides important contributions to our understanding of the origins of huma...
Linguistic communication requires speakers to mutually agree on the meanings of words, but how does ...
The aim of this paper is to mount a challenge to gesture-first hypotheses about the evolution of lan...
Gesture-first theories of language origins often raise two unsubstantiated arguments against vocal o...
This paper defends a gestural origins hypothesis about the evolution of enhanced communication and l...
Scholars have often reasoned that vocalizations are extremely limited in their potential for iconic ...
a b s t r a c t Language can be understood as an embodied system, expressible as gestures. Perceptio...
It has been a popular view to propose that gesture preceded and paved the way for the evolution of (...
International audienceInvestigating in depth the mechanisms underlying human and non‐human primate i...
The origin of language has been a mystery for many years, with many possible theories offered as an ...
The main lines of evidence taken as support for the “gesture-first” hypothesis of language origins a...
Using a naturalistic video database, we examined whether gestures scaffold the symbolic development ...
This proposal presents an evolutionary analysis of three types of co-speech gestures: symbolic emble...
Iconic gestures are hypothesized to be c rucial to the evolution of language. Yet the important ques...
One of the major problems concerning the evolution of human language is to understand how sounds bec...
Comparative psychology provides important contributions to our understanding of the origins of huma...
Linguistic communication requires speakers to mutually agree on the meanings of words, but how does ...