Literature DB >> 19586963

Evidence of an evolutionary precursor to human language affixation in a non-human primate.

Ansgar D Endress1, Donal Cahill, Stefanie Block, Jeffrey Watumull, Marc D Hauser.   

Abstract

Human language, and grammatical competence in particular, relies on a set of computational operations that, in its entirety, is not observed in other animals. Such uniqueness leaves open the possibility that components of our linguistic competence are shared with other animals, having evolved for non-linguistic functions. Here, we explore this problem from a comparative perspective, asking whether cotton-top tamarin monkeys (Saguinus oedipus) can spontaneously (no training) acquire an affixation rule that shares important properties with our inflectional morphology (e.g. the rule that adds -ed to create the past tense, as in the transformation of walk into walk-ed). Using playback experiments, we show that tamarins discriminate between bisyllabic items that start with a specific 'prefix' syllable and those that end with the same syllable as a 'suffix'. These results suggest that some of the computational mechanisms subserving affixation in a diversity of languages are shared with other animals, relying on basic perceptual or memory primitives that evolved for non-linguistic functions.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19586963      PMCID: PMC2827996          DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2009.0445

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biol Lett        ISSN: 1744-9561            Impact factor:   3.703


  18 in total

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5.  Segmentation of the speech stream in a non-human primate: statistical learning in cotton-top tamarins.

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8.  Language comprehension in ape and child.

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  10 in total

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7.  Learning multiple rules simultaneously: Affixes are more salient than reduplications.

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  10 in total

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