鸟瞰人类语言进化史。

Frontiers in evolutionary neuroscience Pub Date : 2012-04-13 eCollection Date: 2012-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fnevo.2012.00005
Robert C Berwick, Gabriël J L Beckers, Kazuo Okanoya, Johan J Bolhuis
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引用次数: 0

摘要

对动物语言能力的比较研究提出了一个进化的难题:语言涉及某些感知和运动能力,但目前还不清楚这是否只是语言外化的输入输出渠道。令人震惊的是,我们的近亲类人猿并不具备听觉-发声学习能力,但鸣禽和海洋哺乳动物等近亲类群却具有这种能力。越来越多的证据表明,语言习得和鸟鸣学习在行为、神经和遗传方面具有相似性。与此同时,研究人员还对灵长类动物和鸣禽的发声进行了正式的语言学分析。关于语言的进化,所有这些研究给了我们什么启示?对语言这种明显具有物种特异性的特征进行比较研究是否可行?我们认为,比较分析仍然是重建语言进化和因果分析的重要方法。一方面,共同血统在大脑的进化中发挥了重要作用,因此鸟类和哺乳动物的大脑可能在很大程度上是同源的,尤其是在涉及听觉感知、发声和听觉记忆的脑区方面。另一方面,听觉-发声学习能力以及外部发声的结构化能力也在趋同进化,因此猿类缺乏鸣禽和人类共有的能力。然而,这种比较分析仍然存在很大的局限性。虽然所有鸟鸣都可以按照一种特别简单的连接系统(即常规语言)进行分类,但迄今为止还没有令人信服的证据表明鸟鸣与人类语言特有的句法复杂性相匹配,人类语言的句法复杂性是由单词和短语等较小的形式组成较大的形式而产生的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

A Bird's Eye View of Human Language Evolution.

A Bird's Eye View of Human Language Evolution.

A Bird's Eye View of Human Language Evolution.

A Bird's Eye View of Human Language Evolution.

COMPARATIVE STUDIES OF LINGUISTIC FACULTIES IN ANIMALS POSE AN EVOLUTIONARY PARADOX: language involves certain perceptual and motor abilities, but it is not clear that this serves as more than an input-output channel for the externalization of language proper. Strikingly, the capability for auditory-vocal learning is not shared with our closest relatives, the apes, but is present in such remotely related groups as songbirds and marine mammals. There is increasing evidence for behavioral, neural, and genetic similarities between speech acquisition and birdsong learning. At the same time, researchers have applied formal linguistic analysis to the vocalizations of both primates and songbirds. What have all these studies taught us about the evolution of language? Is the comparative study of an apparently species-specific trait like language feasible? We argue that comparative analysis remains an important method for the evolutionary reconstruction and causal analysis of the mechanisms underlying language. On the one hand, common descent has been important in the evolution of the brain, such that avian and mammalian brains may be largely homologous, particularly in the case of brain regions involved in auditory perception, vocalization, and auditory memory. On the other hand, there has been convergent evolution of the capacity for auditory-vocal learning, and possibly for structuring of external vocalizations, such that apes lack the abilities that are shared between songbirds and humans. However, significant limitations to this comparative analysis remain. While all birdsong may be classified in terms of a particularly simple kind of concatenation system, the regular languages, there is no compelling evidence to date that birdsong matches the characteristic syntactic complexity of human language, arising from the composition of smaller forms like words and phrases into larger ones.

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