Language Origins

Perspectives on Evolution
ISBN13: 9780199279036ISBN10: 0199279039 Hardback, 446 pages

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Jul 2005,  In Stock

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Description

This book addresses central questions in the evolution of language: where it came from; how it relates to primate communication; how and why it evolved; how it came to be culturally transmitted; and how languages diversified. The chapters are written from the perspective of the latest work in linguistics, neuroscience, psychology, and computer science, and reflect the idea that various cognitive, physical, neurological, social, and cultural prerequisites led to the development of full human language. Some of these evolutionary changes were preadaptations for language, while others were adaptive changes allowing the development of particular linguistic characteristics. The authors consider a broad spectrum of ideas about the conditions that led to the evolution of protolanguage and full language. Some examine changes that occurred in the course of evolution to Homo sapiens; others consider how languages themselves have adapted by evolving to be learnable. Some chapters look at the workings of the brain, and others deploy sophisticated computer simulations that model such aspects as the emergence of speech sounds and the development of grammar. All make use of the latest methods and theories to probe into the origins and subsequent development of the only species that has language.

The book will interest a wide range of linguists, cognitive scientists, biologists, psychologists, neuroscientists, and experts in artificial intelligence, as well as all those fascinated by issues, puzzles, and problems raised by the evolution of language.

Features

  • Latest developments in a thriving cross-disciplinary project
  • Informed by most recent research, including artificial intelligence and neuroscience
  • Supported by empirical methods and data
  • Covers all aspects of language evolution, including speech, syntax, and the learnability and diversity of language
  • Analogous and homologous traits in other species

Reviews

"Language Origins offers a thoroughly interdisciplinary approach to the problem of language evolution.... Language Origins will be especially useful to readers who have already considerable expertise in one field but want to look beyond the boundaries of their own work."--Christina Behme, Philosophical Psychology

Product Details

446 pages; 47 figures; ISBN13: 978-0-19-927903-6ISBN10: 0-19-927903-9

About the Author(s)

Maggie Tallerman is Reader in Linguistics at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne. She has spent her professional life in North East England, having previously taught for 21 years at the University of Durham. Her research interests centre on the origins and evolution of syntax and morphology; modern Brythonic Celtic syntax and morphology; and language typology. She is the author of Understanding Syntax (1998; second edition 2005), and has published widely on the morphosyntax of modern Welsh and Breton, as well as on language evolution. She was review editor for the Journal of Linguistics from 1994 to 2005.

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