Literature DB >> 25088374

Spoken language achieves robustness and evolvability by exploiting degeneracy and neutrality.

Bodo Winter1.   

Abstract

As with biological systems, spoken languages are strikingly robust against perturbations. This paper shows that languages achieve robustness in a way that is highly similar to many biological systems. For example, speech sounds are encoded via multiple acoustically diverse, temporally distributed and functionally redundant cues, characteristics that bear similarities to what biologists call "degeneracy". Speech is furthermore adequately characterized by neutrality, with many different tongue configurations leading to similar acoustic outputs, and different acoustic variants understood as the same by recipients. This highlights the presence of a large neutral network of acoustic neighbors for every speech sound. Such neutrality ensures that a steady backdrop of variation can be maintained without impeding communication, assuring that there is "fodder" for subsequent evolution. Thus, studying linguistic robustness is not only important for understanding how linguistic systems maintain their functioning upon the background of noise, but also for understanding the preconditions for language evolution.
© 2014 WILEY Periodicals, Inc.

Keywords:  degeneracy; evolvability; language evolution; neutrality; robustness

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25088374     DOI: 10.1002/bies.201400028

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bioessays        ISSN: 0265-9247            Impact factor:   4.345


  6 in total

1.  Scale-Free Amplitude Modulation of Neuronal Oscillations Tracks Comprehension of Accelerated Speech.

Authors:  Ana Filipa Teixeira Borges; Anne-Lise Giraud; Huibert D Mansvelder; Klaus Linkenkaer-Hansen
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2017-12-07       Impact factor: 6.167

2.  Tracing the Phonetic Space of Prosodic Focus Marking.

Authors:  Simon Roessig; Bodo Winter; Doris Mücke
Journal:  Front Artif Intell       Date:  2022-05-19

3.  The dynamics of intonation: Categorical and continuous variation in an attractor-based model.

Authors:  Simon Roessig; Doris Mücke; Martine Grice
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-05-23       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Canalization of Language Structure From Environmental Constraints: A Computational Model of Word Learning From Multiple Cues.

Authors:  Padraic Monaghan
Journal:  Top Cogn Sci       Date:  2016-12-18

5.  The Multidimensional Battery of Prosody Perception (MBOPP).

Authors:  Kyle Jasmin; Frederic Dick; Adam Taylor Tierney
Journal:  Wellcome Open Res       Date:  2021-10-06

6.  Altered functional connectivity during speech perception in congenital amusia.

Authors:  Kyle Jasmin; Frederic Dick; Lauren Stewart; Adam Taylor Tierney
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2020-08-07       Impact factor: 8.140

  6 in total

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