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Journal ArticleDOI

The faculty of language: what is it, who has it, and how did it evolve?

TLDR
It is argued that an understanding of the faculty of language requires substantial interdisciplinary cooperation and how current developments in linguistics can be profitably wedded to work in evolutionary biology, anthropology, psychology, and neuroscience is suggested.
Abstract
We argue that an understanding of the faculty of language requires substantial interdisciplinary cooperation. We suggest how current developments in linguistics can be profitably wedded to work in evolutionary biology, anthropology, psychology, and neuroscience. We submit that a distinction should be made between the faculty of language in the broad sense (FLB)and in the narrow sense (FLN) . FLB includes a sensory-motor system, a conceptual-intentional system, and the computational mechanisms for recursion, providing the capacity to generate an infinite range of expressions from a finite set of elements. We hypothesize that FLN only includes recursion and is the only uniquely human component of the faculty of language. We further argue that FLN may have evolved for reasons other than language, hence comparative studies might look for evidence of such computations outside of the domain of communication (for example, number, navigation, and social relations).

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Book

Child Language: Acquisition And Growth

TL;DR: This chapter focuses on the development of an integrated theory of language acquisition through the acquisition of phonology, syntax, semantics and semantics in the context of a young child.
Journal ArticleDOI

Empirical approaches to the study of language evolution.

TL;DR: This special issue provides a concise overview of current models of language evolution, emphasizing the testable predictions that they make, along with overviews of the many sources of data available to test them, and concludes with my own multistage model of how different components of language could have evolved.
Journal ArticleDOI

Voice processing in human and non-human primates

TL;DR: This comparative review focuses on behavioural and neurobiological evidence relative to two issues central to voice perception in human and non-human primates: are CVs ‘special’, i.e. are they analysed using dedicated cerebral mechanisms not used for other sound categories, and to what extent and using what neural mechanisms do primates identify conspecific individuals from their vocalizations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Species-specific calls activate homologs of Broca's and Wernicke's areas in the macaque

TL;DR: Neural systems associated with perceiving species-specific vocalizations in rhesus macaques using H215O positron emission tomography are identified and this finding suggests the possibility that the last common ancestor of macaques and humans possessed key neural mechanisms that were plausible candidates for exaptation during the evolution of language.
Book

Pragmatics and Non-Verbal Communication

TL;DR: The authors examined nonverbal behaviours from a pragmatic perspective, and provided the analytical basis to answer some important questions: How are non-verbal behaviours interpreted? What do they convey? How can they best accommodated within a theory of utterance interpretation?
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Aspects of the Theory of Syntax

TL;DR: Methodological preliminaries of generative grammars as theories of linguistic competence; theory of performance; organization of a generative grammar; justification of grammar; descriptive and explanatory theories; evaluation procedures; linguistic theory and language learning.
Book

Aspects of the Theory of Syntax

Noam Chomsky
TL;DR: Generative grammars as theories of linguistic competence as discussed by the authors have been used as a theory of performance for language learning. But they have not yet been applied to the problem of language modeling.
Book

The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex

TL;DR: In this paper, secondary sexual characters of fishes, amphibians and reptiles are presented. But the authors focus on the secondary sexual characteristics of fishes and amphibians rather than the primary sexual characters.
Book

The Minimalist Program

Noam Chomsky
TL;DR: This twentieth-anniversary edition reissues Noam Chomsky's classic work The Minimalist Program with a new preface by the author, which emphasizes that the minimalist approach developed in the book and in subsequent work "is a program, not a theory."
Journal Article

The descent of man and selection in relation to sex: documento

TL;DR: Part I. Sexual Selection (continued): Secondary sexual characters of fishes, amphibians and reptiles, and secondarySexual characters of birds.