| Literature DB >> 27368626 |
Mark Pagel1,2.
Abstract
Human languages evolve by a process of descent with modification in which parent languages give rise to daughter languages over time and in a manner that mimics the evolution of biological species. Descent with modification is just one of many parallels between biological and linguistic evolution that, taken together, offer up a Darwinian perspective on how languages evolve. Combined with statistical methods borrowed from evolutionary biology, this Darwinian perspective has brought new opportunities to the study of the evolution of human languages. These include the statistical inference of phylogenetic trees of languages, the study of how linguistic traits evolve over thousands of years of language change, the reconstruction of ancestral or proto-languages, and using language change to date historical events.Entities:
Keywords: Darwin; Evolution; Languages; Phylogeny
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27368626 PMCID: PMC5325856 DOI: 10.3758/s13423-016-1072-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychon Bull Rev ISSN: 1069-9384
Some parallels between biological and linguistic evolution
| Biological evolution | Language evolution |
|---|---|
| Discrete heritable units (e.g., nucleotides, amino acids, and genes) | Discrete heritable units (e.g., words, phonemes, and syntax) |
| DNA copying | Teaching, learning, and imitation |
| Mutation (e.g., many mechanisms yielding genetic alterations) | Innovation (e.g., formant variation, mistakes, sound changes, and introduced sounds and words) |
| Homology | Cognates |
| Natural selection | Social selection and trends |
| Drift | Drift |
| Speciation | Language or cultural splitting |
| Concerted evolution | Regular sound change |
| Horizontal gene transfer | Borrowing |
| Hybridization (e.g., horse with zebra and wheat with strawberry) | Language Creoles (e.g., Surinamese) |
| Geographic clines | Dialects and dialect chains |
| Fossils | Ancient texts |
| Extinction | Language death |
Fig. 1a A phylogeny of the Indo-European languages showing several of the major groups and the historical branching points. Triangles at the tips of the tree indicate groups of contemporary languages that share a common ancestor. The base or root of the tree corresponds to the ancestral or proto-Indo-European language that might have been spoken sometime around 6,000 (Chang, Cathcart, Hall, & Garrett, 2015) to 7,500 years ago (Bouckaert et al., 2013). Timings shown follow Bouckaert et al. (2013); b A phylogeny highlighting languages from each of the major groups in a and showing the word in that language for two, bird, and drink. Words represented with the same color are in the same cognate class, indicating they derive from a common ancestral word. The words for two are cognate across the entire Indo-European language family suggesting their common ancestor was present in proto-Indo-European. Words for bird are much younger, and drink is intermediate. “Word order” denotes the dominant ordering of subjects (S), verbs (V), and objects (O) in main clauses of a language. The presence of SOV in Hittite and Sanskrit—two languages that branched off early from the root of the tree—suggests that SOV is the ancestral state, and statistical modelling supports this inference (text)