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Evolution of Human Language

        Carissa Fletcher
           2.4.2012
Contents
•   Define language and its components
•   Relationship to social learning
•   Theories on how language evolved
•   Empirical evidence from NHP research
•   Evidence from genetics and the fossil record
Definition of Language
“language can be defined as the bidirectional
system that permits the expression of arbitrary
thoughts as signals and the reverse
interpretation of those thoughts”Fitch, Huber and Bugnyar (2010)
Who has language?
Animals have communication systems that allow
some biologically important information
concepts or emotions to be expressed vocally or
visually.

However, humans are unique in possessing a
system which allows any concept to be
expressed and understood.
Components of human language in the
           broad sense

       Syntax                  Semantics

                    Human
                 Language as
                      Large
                 an emergent
                     memory
                   property



     Phonology                  Pragmatics


                                     Fitch 2010
Definitions
Term         Components                                 Nature

Syntax       -   Word stems, affixes                    Computational. Structure generating
             -   Phrases, sentences                     mechanisms that map between signals
             -   Rule governing combinations            and concepts.
             -   Hierarchical (

             -   Recursive/self embedding


Phonology    - Phonemes (fricatives, nasals, plosives   Physical. Perceptual and motor systems
               m, p, b, f,v)                            underlying speech. Also, the process of
             - Arranged hierarchically into syllables   learning requires close imitation.
             - Intonation, stress, prosody, rhythm
             - Double articulation

Semantics    - Meaning in the language                  Philosophical. Central cognitive
                                                        mechanism supporting concept
                                                        formation and expression



Pragmatics   -What the speaker intends                  Psychological. Requires an ability to infer
             - Mittelungsbedurfnis                      intentions of a signaller which can be
             - (Shared attention system, Theory of      based on indirect cues such as ‘gaze
               Mind mechanism                           direction’. Also, sharing inner thoughts
                                                        relies on an understanding of the
                                                        thoughts of another (ToM)
Language – its relationship to social
         cognition and culture
Advanced social cognition is
required for children to acquire
language as sophisticated “mind
reading” abilities needed to
                                   Social      Language
deduce word meanings and to        cognition
communicate pragmatically.


Once in place language itself
becomes a tool for social
cognition becomes central to
Human Culture.
Language diversity
- Over 6000+ different
languages globally
- Darwin saw
  similarities between
  the evolution of
  species and the
  evolution of
  languages.
                         Grey et al. 2010 NeighborNet analyses of the Indo-
                         European linguistic items
Theories on how language evolved?
1. Innate biological system
- System of cognitive structures develop and
  are genetically determined.
- There are some shared computational
  commonalities between all languages e.g.
  Universal Grammar
(Chomsky 2007)

- language syntax shows evidence of complex
  design – similar to, for example, the visual
  system. “biological adaptation is the only way
  to explain the appearance of such design”.
(Pinker 2003; Nowak 2001)
2. Usage based system:
- Human language is symbolic
- We evolved cognitive skills enabling the use of
  symbols
- 'social-cognitive' and 'social-motivational'
  infrastructure needs to be in place before
  language could arise in humans.
- Human communication is a fundamentally
  cooperative enterprise that could not have arisen
  without the shared intentionality.
- Shared intentionality allows for the emergence
  of naturally intention directing gestures
  (pointing and miming)Tomasello(2008)
2. Usage based system:
- The close relationship between
   manual gesture and vocalization(in
   the form of speech via mirror
   neurons Corballis (2003)

- Cooperative hunting, food savaging
  and food sharing have been
  powerful drivers of the information
  sharing capacity embodied in
  language.

-           suggested that the capacity
    Bickerton (2010)

    of displacement in human language
Comparative approach

1. Shared vs
   Unique?

2. Gradual or non-
gradual evolution
of this feature?

3. Continuity or
exaptation?          Fitch 2010
Vocal Production in Primates                           ~ 63Mya



-   NHP calls develop under
    strong genetic influences
    (Hammerschmidt and Fischer 2008)



-   Vocal plasticity in NHP the                                                                Mouse

    form of acoustic                                                                           lemur


    convergence at the group
    level has now been well
    documented.

-   Mouse lemurs; Hafen et al. 1999,
-   Japanese macaques,               - high degrees of social affinity also produced
-   Chimpanzees (Tanaka 2006)        acoustically more similar calls independent of genetic
-   Marmosets (Snowdon 1999),        relatedness (Lemasson 2011).
-   Campbell's monkeys (Lammasson ? neural circuits involved in the generation of vocal calls
    2004; Ouattara 2009
                                       in NHP are radically different from those involved in
                                       human speech(Jürgens, 2002).
Language affixation
Cotton Top Tamerins can learn an
affixation pattern that shares
important information with our own
inflectional morphology

e.g. the rule that adds ‘-ed’ to
create the past tense
(Endress et al. 2009)
Method
‘shoy’ = affix
‘bi’, ‘ka’, ‘na’, ‘to’, ‘gu’ ,‘lo’, ‘ri’ and ‘nu’ = familiar stems
‘brain’, ‘breast’, ‘wasp’, ‘snake’ and ‘swan’ = test stems

1.    Familiarised subjects to bisyllabic items
      conforming to either a pre-fixation or suffixation
      pattern they heard 14 words 70 times.

2.    TEST ‘shoy’- ‘bi’ or TEST ‘ka’- ‘shoy’

a.   Half the subjects tested on the pre-fixation pattern
     and 29 days later the suffixation pattern

a.   The other half tested suffixation pattern first and
     33 days later the pre-fixation pattern
Results
  The monkeys orientated more towards violations that
                 consistent conditions

  Cotton Top Tamerins can learn a rule formally similar to
                affixation patterns in humans
-suggest that this domain specific mechanism shared across
                       humans and NHP
Combinatorial signals
                                Human speech uses a rule-governed assemblage of
                                morphemes into more complex vocal expressions.

                                Loud alarm calls

                                Hack=
                                Pyows =


Putty nose
monkey
Arnold and Zuberbuhler
                              Playback
2004                          experiments             Pyow-Hack = ‘Group
                                                      progression’
Supporting theories

  Innate Biological System
Evidence from gestures
                                         Association of manual and
                                         facial/vocal signals in groups of
                                         chimpanzees and bonobos,
                                         - 31 manual gestures
                                         - 18 facial/vocal signals.

                                         • Gestures seem less closely tied to
                                           particular emotions, such as
                                           aggression or affiliation,


• possess a more adaptable function
  and likely under greater cortical
                                       • Candidate modality to have acquired
  control than facial/ vocal signals
                                         symbolic meaning in early hominins?
Symbolic language
                                                     • Washoewas taught over 100
                                                       manual signs,3 based loosely
                                                       on American Sign Language
                                                       (ASL)
                                                     • Combine signs into two- or
                                                       three-‘‘word” sequences to
                                                       make simple requests (Gardner &
                                                        Gardner, 1969).




Kanzi –large vocabulary, based on pointing to symbols on a keyboard + gestures
-limited to only two or three ‘‘words”.
-follow instructions conveyed in spoken sentences with as many as seven or eight
words (Savage-Rumbaugh, Shanker, & Taylor, 1998).
-roughly equivalent to that of a 2½-year-old girl (Savage-Rumbaugh et al., 1998)
Supporting theories


  Usage based system
Genetics
-KE family show no activation in Broca’s area while covertly
generating verbs (Liégeois et al., 2003). Point mutation in FOXP2

-FOXP2 gene in humans is involved in the cooption of vocal
control by Broca’s area (Corballis,2004a).

-Highly conserved in mammals,
FOXP2 gene underwent two mutations since the split
between hominid and chimpanzee lines.

- ‘‘some 10,000–100,000 years ago” (Enardet al., 2002) it not       KE family
unreasonable to suppose that it coincided with the
emergence of Homo sapiens around 170,000 years ago.

-Recent evidence that the mutation is also present in the
DNA of a 45,000-year-old Neandertalfossil, suggesting that
is goes back at least 300,000– 400,000 years to the common
ancestor of humans and Neandertals(Krause et al., 2007).
Fossil Record
-Fossil evidence suggests that the anatomical requirements for
fully articulate speech were probably not complete until the
emergence of H. sapiens.

e.g. hypoglossal nerve (see image), which passes through this
canal and innervates the tongue, passes through the
hypoglossal canal, and this canal is much larger in humans than
in great apes, probably because of the important role of the
tongue in speech.

-   Fossil evidence suggests that the size of the hypoglossal
    canal in early australopithecines, and Homo habilis, was
    within the range of that in modern great apes,

-   the Neanderthal and early H. sapiens skulls was contained
    well within the modern human range (Kay, Cartmill, & Barlow, 1998)
Summary
•   Define language and its components
•   Relationship to social learning
•   Theories on how language evolved
•   Empirical evidence from NHP research
•   Evidence from genetics and the fossil record

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Evolution of human language final

  • 1. Evolution of Human Language Carissa Fletcher 2.4.2012
  • 2. Contents • Define language and its components • Relationship to social learning • Theories on how language evolved • Empirical evidence from NHP research • Evidence from genetics and the fossil record
  • 3. Definition of Language “language can be defined as the bidirectional system that permits the expression of arbitrary thoughts as signals and the reverse interpretation of those thoughts”Fitch, Huber and Bugnyar (2010)
  • 4. Who has language? Animals have communication systems that allow some biologically important information concepts or emotions to be expressed vocally or visually. However, humans are unique in possessing a system which allows any concept to be expressed and understood.
  • 5. Components of human language in the broad sense Syntax Semantics Human Language as Large an emergent memory property Phonology Pragmatics Fitch 2010
  • 6. Definitions Term Components Nature Syntax - Word stems, affixes Computational. Structure generating - Phrases, sentences mechanisms that map between signals - Rule governing combinations and concepts. - Hierarchical ( - Recursive/self embedding Phonology - Phonemes (fricatives, nasals, plosives Physical. Perceptual and motor systems m, p, b, f,v) underlying speech. Also, the process of - Arranged hierarchically into syllables learning requires close imitation. - Intonation, stress, prosody, rhythm - Double articulation Semantics - Meaning in the language Philosophical. Central cognitive mechanism supporting concept formation and expression Pragmatics -What the speaker intends Psychological. Requires an ability to infer - Mittelungsbedurfnis intentions of a signaller which can be - (Shared attention system, Theory of based on indirect cues such as ‘gaze Mind mechanism direction’. Also, sharing inner thoughts relies on an understanding of the thoughts of another (ToM)
  • 7. Language – its relationship to social cognition and culture Advanced social cognition is required for children to acquire language as sophisticated “mind reading” abilities needed to Social Language deduce word meanings and to cognition communicate pragmatically. Once in place language itself becomes a tool for social cognition becomes central to Human Culture.
  • 8. Language diversity - Over 6000+ different languages globally - Darwin saw similarities between the evolution of species and the evolution of languages. Grey et al. 2010 NeighborNet analyses of the Indo- European linguistic items
  • 9. Theories on how language evolved? 1. Innate biological system - System of cognitive structures develop and are genetically determined. - There are some shared computational commonalities between all languages e.g. Universal Grammar (Chomsky 2007) - language syntax shows evidence of complex design – similar to, for example, the visual system. “biological adaptation is the only way to explain the appearance of such design”. (Pinker 2003; Nowak 2001)
  • 10. 2. Usage based system: - Human language is symbolic - We evolved cognitive skills enabling the use of symbols - 'social-cognitive' and 'social-motivational' infrastructure needs to be in place before language could arise in humans. - Human communication is a fundamentally cooperative enterprise that could not have arisen without the shared intentionality. - Shared intentionality allows for the emergence of naturally intention directing gestures (pointing and miming)Tomasello(2008)
  • 11. 2. Usage based system: - The close relationship between manual gesture and vocalization(in the form of speech via mirror neurons Corballis (2003) - Cooperative hunting, food savaging and food sharing have been powerful drivers of the information sharing capacity embodied in language. - suggested that the capacity Bickerton (2010) of displacement in human language
  • 12. Comparative approach 1. Shared vs Unique? 2. Gradual or non- gradual evolution of this feature? 3. Continuity or exaptation? Fitch 2010
  • 13. Vocal Production in Primates ~ 63Mya - NHP calls develop under strong genetic influences (Hammerschmidt and Fischer 2008) - Vocal plasticity in NHP the Mouse form of acoustic lemur convergence at the group level has now been well documented. - Mouse lemurs; Hafen et al. 1999, - Japanese macaques, - high degrees of social affinity also produced - Chimpanzees (Tanaka 2006) acoustically more similar calls independent of genetic - Marmosets (Snowdon 1999), relatedness (Lemasson 2011). - Campbell's monkeys (Lammasson ? neural circuits involved in the generation of vocal calls 2004; Ouattara 2009 in NHP are radically different from those involved in human speech(Jürgens, 2002).
  • 14. Language affixation Cotton Top Tamerins can learn an affixation pattern that shares important information with our own inflectional morphology e.g. the rule that adds ‘-ed’ to create the past tense (Endress et al. 2009)
  • 15. Method ‘shoy’ = affix ‘bi’, ‘ka’, ‘na’, ‘to’, ‘gu’ ,‘lo’, ‘ri’ and ‘nu’ = familiar stems ‘brain’, ‘breast’, ‘wasp’, ‘snake’ and ‘swan’ = test stems 1. Familiarised subjects to bisyllabic items conforming to either a pre-fixation or suffixation pattern they heard 14 words 70 times. 2. TEST ‘shoy’- ‘bi’ or TEST ‘ka’- ‘shoy’ a. Half the subjects tested on the pre-fixation pattern and 29 days later the suffixation pattern a. The other half tested suffixation pattern first and 33 days later the pre-fixation pattern
  • 16. Results The monkeys orientated more towards violations that consistent conditions Cotton Top Tamerins can learn a rule formally similar to affixation patterns in humans -suggest that this domain specific mechanism shared across humans and NHP
  • 17. Combinatorial signals Human speech uses a rule-governed assemblage of morphemes into more complex vocal expressions. Loud alarm calls Hack= Pyows = Putty nose monkey Arnold and Zuberbuhler Playback 2004 experiments Pyow-Hack = ‘Group progression’
  • 18. Supporting theories Innate Biological System
  • 19. Evidence from gestures Association of manual and facial/vocal signals in groups of chimpanzees and bonobos, - 31 manual gestures - 18 facial/vocal signals. • Gestures seem less closely tied to particular emotions, such as aggression or affiliation, • possess a more adaptable function and likely under greater cortical • Candidate modality to have acquired control than facial/ vocal signals symbolic meaning in early hominins?
  • 20. Symbolic language • Washoewas taught over 100 manual signs,3 based loosely on American Sign Language (ASL) • Combine signs into two- or three-‘‘word” sequences to make simple requests (Gardner & Gardner, 1969). Kanzi –large vocabulary, based on pointing to symbols on a keyboard + gestures -limited to only two or three ‘‘words”. -follow instructions conveyed in spoken sentences with as many as seven or eight words (Savage-Rumbaugh, Shanker, & Taylor, 1998). -roughly equivalent to that of a 2½-year-old girl (Savage-Rumbaugh et al., 1998)
  • 21. Supporting theories Usage based system
  • 22. Genetics -KE family show no activation in Broca’s area while covertly generating verbs (Liégeois et al., 2003). Point mutation in FOXP2 -FOXP2 gene in humans is involved in the cooption of vocal control by Broca’s area (Corballis,2004a). -Highly conserved in mammals, FOXP2 gene underwent two mutations since the split between hominid and chimpanzee lines. - ‘‘some 10,000–100,000 years ago” (Enardet al., 2002) it not KE family unreasonable to suppose that it coincided with the emergence of Homo sapiens around 170,000 years ago. -Recent evidence that the mutation is also present in the DNA of a 45,000-year-old Neandertalfossil, suggesting that is goes back at least 300,000– 400,000 years to the common ancestor of humans and Neandertals(Krause et al., 2007).
  • 23. Fossil Record -Fossil evidence suggests that the anatomical requirements for fully articulate speech were probably not complete until the emergence of H. sapiens. e.g. hypoglossal nerve (see image), which passes through this canal and innervates the tongue, passes through the hypoglossal canal, and this canal is much larger in humans than in great apes, probably because of the important role of the tongue in speech. - Fossil evidence suggests that the size of the hypoglossal canal in early australopithecines, and Homo habilis, was within the range of that in modern great apes, - the Neanderthal and early H. sapiens skulls was contained well within the modern human range (Kay, Cartmill, & Barlow, 1998)
  • 24. Summary • Define language and its components • Relationship to social learning • Theories on how language evolved • Empirical evidence from NHP research • Evidence from genetics and the fossil record

Editor's Notes

  1. Note the longer oral cavity and much lower larynx in the humans, with concomitant distortion of tongue shape compared with orang-utans and chimpanzees. These differences allow a much greater range of sounds to be produced by humans, which would have been significant in the evolution of speech (Fitch 2000).
  2.  Hafen T, Neveu H, Rumpler Y, Wilden I, Zimmermann E: Acoustically dimorphic advertisement calls separate morphologically and genetically homogenous populations of the grey mouse lemur (Microcebusmurinus).Folia Primatologica 1998, 69(Suppl 1):342-356.  Tanaka T, Sugiura H, Masataka N: Cross-sectional and longitudinal studies of the development of group differences in acoustic features of coo calls in two groups of Japanese macaques.Ethology 2006, 112:7-21. Publisher Full Text  Crockford C, Herbinger I, Vigilant L, Boesh C: Wild chimpanzees produce group-specific calls: a case for vocal learning?Ethology 2004, 110:221-243. Publisher Full Text  Snowdon CT, Elowson AM: Pygmy marmosets modify call structure when paired.Ethology 1999, 105:893-908. Publisher Full Text  Lemasson A, Hausberger M: Patterns of vocal sharing and social dynamics in a captive group of Campbell's monkeys.Journal of Comparative Psychology 2004, 118:347-359. PubMed Abstract |Publisher Full Text  Ouattara K, Lemasson A, Zuberbühler K: The alarm call system of female Campbell's monkeys.Animal Behaviour 2009, 78:35-44. Publisher Full Text  Hopkins WD, Taglialatela J, Leavens DA: Chimpanzees differentially produce novel vocalizations to capture the attention of a human.Animal Behaviour 2007, 73:281-286. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text |PubMed Central Full Text 
  3. probably based on the extraction of two or three key words rather than a full decoding of the syntax of the sentences.