Alison Wray
2007
The consequences of talking to strangers: Evolutionary corollaries of socio-cultural influences on linguistic formdoi.orgPDF
Lingua 117(3):543-578, 2007
We explore the proposal that the linguistic forms and structures employed by our earliest language-using ancestors might have been significantly different from those observed in the languages we are most familiar with today, not because of a biological difference between them and ...MORE ⇓
We explore the proposal that the linguistic forms and structures employed by our earliest language-using ancestors might have been significantly different from those observed in the languages we are most familiar with today, not because of a biological difference between them and us, but because the communicative context in which they operated was fundamentally different from that of most modern humans. Languages that are used predominantly for esoteric (intra-group) communication tend to have features that are semantically and grammatically 'complex', while those used also (or even exclusively) for exoteric (inter-group) communication become 'simplified' towards rule-based regularity and semantic transparency. Drawing on a range of contemporary data, we propose a psycholinguistic explanation for why esotericity would promote such complexity, and argue that this is the natural default setting for human language. This being so, it should be taken into account when modelling the evolution of language, for some of the features that are normally viewed as fundamental - including the notion of fully developed underlying rule-based systematicity - may, in fact, be cultural add-ons.
2002
The Transition to Language
Oxford University Press, 2002
Linguists, biological anthropologists, and cognitive scientists come together in this book to explore the origins and early evolution of phonology, syntax, and semantics. They consider the nature of pre-and proto-linguistic communication, the internal and external triggers that ...MORE ⇓
Linguists, biological anthropologists, and cognitive scientists come together in this book to explore the origins and early evolution of phonology, syntax, and semantics. They consider the nature of pre-and proto-linguistic communication, the internal and external triggers that ...
Dual Processing in Protolanguage: Performance Without Competence
The Transition to Language 6.0, 2002
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Introduction: Conceptualizing Transition in an Evolving Field
The Transition to Language 1.0, 2002
2000
Holistic utterances in protolanguage: The link from primates to humans
The Evolutionary Emergence of Language: Social Function and the Origins of Linguistic Form, 2000
1998
Language and Communication 18(1):47-67, 1998
Much of the recent work on protolanguage has assumed that it contained a limited number of referential words in short sequences. However, there are good reasons for considering the possibility that it consisted of holistic utterances which performed two types of ...