The First Word: The Search for the Origins of Language

Home > Other > The First Word: The Search for the Origins of Language > Page 40
The First Word: The Search for the Origins of Language Page 40

by Christine Kenneally


  Kelly, Kevin, Out of Control: The Rise of Neo-Biological Civilization (Reading, Mass.: Addison-Wesley, 1994).

  Kenneally, Christine, “Prosody, Animacy, and Syntax in the Perception of Speech,” Ph.D. dissertation, University of Cambridge, 1997.

  Kenward, Ben, Alex A. S. Weir, Christian Rutz, and Alex Kacelnik, “Tool Manufacture by Naive Juvenile Crows,” Nature 433 (2005): 121.

  Khaitovich, Philipp, Ines Hellmann, Wolfgang Enard, Katja Nowick, Marcus Leinweber, Henriette Franz, Gunter Weiss, Michael Lachmann, and Svante Pääbo, “Parallel Patterns of Evolution in the Genomes and Transcriptomes of Humans and Chimpanzees,” Science 309 (2005): 1850–54.

  King, Barbara J., The Dynamic Dance: Nonvocal Communication in African Great Apes (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2004).

  King, J., D. Rumbaugh, and S. Savage-Rumbaugh, “Perception as Personality Traits and Semantic Learning in Evolving Hominids,” in eds. Michael C. Corballis and S. E. G. Lea, The Descent of Mind: Psychological Perspectives on Hominid Evolution (New York: Oxford University Press, 1999), pp. 98–115.

  Kirby, Simon, “Spontaneous Evolution of Linguistic Structure: An Iterated Learning Model of the Emergence of Regularity and Irregularity,” IEEE Transactions on Evolutionary Computations 5 (2001): 102–10.

  ———, “Natural Language from Artificial Life,” Artificial Life 8 (2002): 185–216.

  ———, “The Mechanisms of Adaptive Linguistic Evolution,” paper presented at Morris Symposium on Language Evolution, Stony Brook, N.Y., October 2005.

  Kirby, Simon, and James R. Hurford, “The Emergence of Linguistic Structure: An Overview of the Iterated Learning Model,” in eds. Angelo Cangelos and Domenico Parisi, Simulating the Evolution of Language (London: Springer Verlag, 2002).

  Klein, Richard G., “Whither the Neanderthals?” Science 299 (2003): 1525–27.

  Knecht, S., A. Floel, B. Drager, C. Breitenstein, J. Sommer, H. Henningsen, E. B. Ringelstein, and A. Pascual-Leone, “Degree of Language Lateralization Determines Susceptibility to Unilateral Brain Lesions,” Nature Neuroscience 5 (2002): 695–99.

  Knight, Chris, “Decoding Chomsky,” European Review 12 (2004): 581–604.

  Knight, Chris, Michael Studdert-Kennedy, and James R. Hurford, eds., The Evolutionary Emergence of Language: Social Function and the Origins of Linguistic Form (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2000).

  Kozorovitskiy, Yevgenia, Charles G. Gross, Catherine Kopil, Lisa Battaglia, Meghan McBreen, Alexis M. Stranahan, and Elizabeth Gould, “Experience Induces Structural and Biochemical Changes in the Adult Primate Brain,” PNAS 102 (2005): 17478–82. Krutzen, Michael, Janet Mann, Michael R. Heithaus, Richard C. Connor, Lars Bejder, and William B. Sherwin, “Cultural Transmission of Tool Use in Bottlenose Dolphins,” PNAS 102 (2005): 8939–43.

  Lai, Cecilia S. L., Simon E. Fisher, Jane A. Hurst, Faraneh Vargha-Khadem, and Anthony P. Monaco, “A Forkhead-Domain Gene Is Mutated in a Severe Speech and Language Disorder,” Nature 413 (2001): 519–23.

  Lakoff, George, “Deep Language,” The New York Review of Books 20 (February 8, 1973).

  Leavens, D.A., and W. D. Hopkins, “The Whole-Hand Point: The Structure and Function of Pointing from a Comparative Perspective,” Journal of Comparative Psychology 113(1999): 417–25.

  Lieberman, Philip, The Biology and Evolution of Language (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1984).

  ———, Eve Spoke: Human Language and Human Evolution (New York: W.W. Norton, 1998).

  ———, Human Language and Our Reptilian Brain: The Subcortical Bases of Speech, Syntax, and Thought, Perspectives in Cognitive Neuroscience (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2000).

  ———, “On the Nature and Evolution of the Neural Bases of Human Language,” Yearbook of Physical Anthropology 45 (2002): 36–62.

  ———, Toward an Evolutionary Biology of Language (Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2006).

  ———, “The Evolution of Human Speech: Its Anatomical and Neural Bases,” Current Anthropology 48 (2007): 39–66.

  Lieberman, Philip, Angie Morey, Jesse Hochstadt, Marla Larson, and Sandra Mather, “Mount Everest: A Space-Analogue for Speech Monitoring of Cognitive Deficits and Stress,” Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine 76 (2005): 198–207.

  Locke, John L., and Barry Bogin, “Language and Life History: A New Perspective on the Development and Evolution of Human Language,” Behavioral and Brain Sciences 29(2006): 259–325.

  Long, Kevin D., Grace Kennedy, and Evan Balaban, “Transferring an Inborn Auditory Perceptual Predisposition with Interspecies Brain Transplants,” PNAS 98 (2001): 5862–67.

  Longworth, C. E., S. E. Keenan, R. A. Barker, W. D. Marslen-Wilson, and L. K. Tyler, “The Basal Ganglia and Rule-Governed Language Use: Evidence from Vascular and Degenerative Conditions,” Brain 128 (2005): 584–96.

  Loritz, Donald, How the Brain Evolved Language (New York: Oxford University Press, 2002).

  MacFarquhar, Larissa, “The Devil’s Accountant,” The New Yorker (March 21, 2003).

  Maclay, Howard, “Overview,” in eds. Danny D. Steinberg and Leon A. Jakobovits, Semantics; an Interdisciplinary Reader in Philosophy, Linguistics and Psychology (Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1971), p. 163.

  MacNeilage, Peter F., “The Frame/Content Theory of Evolution of Speech Production,” Behavioral and Brain Sciences 21 (1998): 499–546.

  Maess, Burkhard, Stefan Koelsch, Thomas C. Gunter, and Angela D. Friederici, “Musical Syntax Is Processed in Broca’s Area: An MEG Study,” Nature Neuroscience 4 (2001): 540–45.

  Marantz, Alec, Y. Miyashita, and Wayne O’Neil, Image, Language, Brain: Papers from the First Mind Articulation Project Symposium (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2000).

  Marcus, Gary F., “Before the Word,” Nature 431 (2004): 745.

  ———, The Birth of the Mind: How a Tiny Number of Genes Creates the Complexities of Human Thought (New York: Basic Books, 2004).

  ———, “Startling Starlings,” Nature 440 (2006): 1117–18.

  Marcus, Gary F., and Simon E. Fisher, “Foxp2 in Focus: What Can Genes Tell Us About Speech and Language?” Trends in Cognitive Sciences 7 (2003): 257–62.

  Marino, Lori, “Turning the Empirical Corner on Fi: The Probability of Complex Intelligence,” in eds. Guillermo A. Lemarchand and Karen Jean Meech, Bioastronomy ’99: A New Era in Bioastronomy. Proceedings of a meeting held at the Hapuna Beach Prince Hotel, Kohala Coast, Hawaii, 2–6 August, 1999 (San Francisco: Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 2000), pp. 431–35.

  ———, “Convergence of Complex Cognitive Abilities in Cetaceans and Primates,” Brain Behavior and Evolution 59 (2002): 21–32.

  ———, “Absolute Brain Size: Did We Throw the Baby Out with the Bathwater?” PNAS 103 (2006): 13563–64.

  Marslen-Wilson, William D., and Lorraine K. Tyler, “The Lexicon, Grammar, and the Past Tense: Dissociation Revisited,” in eds. Michael Tomasello and Dan Isaac Slobin, Beyond Nature-Nurture: Essays in Honor of Elizabeth Bates (Mahwah, N.J.: L. Erlbaum, 2005).

  Marx, J. L., “Ape-Language Controversy Flares Up,” Science 207 (1980): 1330–33.

  Matthews, P. H., Grammatical Theory in the United States from Bloomfield to Chomsky (Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1993).

  Mayr, Ernst, What Evolution Is (New York: Basic Books, 2001).

  McCowan, B., and D. Reiss, “The Fallacy of ‘Signature Whistles’ in Bottlenose Dolphins: A Comparative Perspective of ‘Signature Information’ in Animal Vocalizations,” Animal Behaviour 62 (2001): 1151–62.

  McNeill, D., B. Bertenthal, J. Cole, and S. Gallagher, “Gesture-First, but No Gestures?” Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28 (2005): 138–39.

  McWhorter, John H., The Power of Babel: A Natural History of Language (New York: Times Books/Henry Holt, 2001).

  Mekel-Bobrov, Nitzan, Sandra L. Gilbert, Patrick D. Evans, Eric J. Vallender, Jeffrey R. Anderson, Richard R. Hudson, Sarah A. Tishkof
f, and Bruce T. Lahn, “Ongoing Adaptive Evolution of ASPM, a Brain Size Determinant in Homo sapiens,” Science 309(2005): 1720–22.

  Melis, Alicia P., Brian Hare, and Michael Tomasello, “Chimpanzees Recruit the Best Collaborators,” Science 311 (2006): 1297–1300.

  Mellars, Paul, “Why Did Modern Human Populations Disperse from Africa ca. 60,000 Years Ago? A New Model,” PNAS 103 (2006): 9381–86.

  Mercader, Julio, Huw Barton, Jason Gillespie, Jack Harris, Steven Kuhn, Robert Tyler, and Christophe Boesch. “4,300-Year-Old Chimpanzee Sites and the Origins of Percussive Stone Technology,” PNAS 104 (2007): 3043–48.

  Mercader, Julio, Melissa Panger, and Christophe Boesch, “Excavation of a Chimpanzee Stone Tool Site in the African Rainforest,” Science 296 (2002): 1452–55.

  Mietto, Paolo, Marco Avanzini, and Giuseppe Rolandi, “Human Footprints in Pleistocene Volcanic Ash,” Nature 422 (2003): 133.

  Morford, J. P,. “Insights to Language from the Study of Gesture: A Review of Research on the Gestural Communication of Non-Signing Deaf People,” Language and Communication 16 (1996): 165–78.

  Mulcahy, Nicholas J., and Josep Call, “Apes Save Tools for Future Use,” Science 312(2006): 1038–40.

  Müller, Cornelia, “Gesture Studies: A New Field Emerging,” paper presented at Gestural Communication in Nonhuman and Human Primates (workshop), Evolution of Language conference, Leipzig, Germany, March 2004.

  Nadis, S., “Look Who’s Talking,” New Scientist (February 21, 2003).

  Newport, Elissa L., Marc D. Hauser, Geertrui Spaepen, and Richard N. Aslin, “Learning at a Distance II. Statistical Learning of Non-Adjacent Dependencies in a Non-Human Primate,” Cognitive Psychology 49 (2004): 85–117.

  Nilsson, D.-E., and S. Pelger, “A Pessimistic Estimate of the Time Required for an Eye to Evolve,” Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 256 (1994): 53–58.

  Nishimura, Takeshi, Akichika Mikami, Juri Suzuki, and Tetsuro Matsuzawa, “Descent of the Larynx in Chimpanzee Infants,” PNAS 100 (2003): 6930–33.

  Notman, Hugh, and Drew Rendall, “Contextual Variation in Chimpanzee Pant Hoots and Its Implications for Referential Communication,” Animal Behaviour 70 (2005): 117–90.

  Nowak, Martin A., Natalia L. Komarova, and Partha Niyogi, “Computational and Evolutionary Aspects of Language,” Nature 417 (2002): 611–17.

  O’Donnell, T. J., M. D. Hauser, and W.T. Fitch, “Using Mathematical Models of Language Experimentally,” Trends in Cognitive Sciences 9 (2005): 284–89.

  Oller, D. Kimbrough, and Ulrike Griebel, Evolution of Communication Systems: A Comparative Approach (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2004).

  Olsen, Steve, Mapping Human History: Genes, Race and Our Common Origin (New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2002).

  Origgi, Gloria, and Dan Sperber, “A Pragmatic Perspective on the Evolution of Language and Languages,” Coevolution of Language and Theory of Mind 6 (2004), http://www.interdisciplines.org/coevolution/papers/6.

  Orr, H. Allen, “Darwinian Storytelling,” The New York Review of Books 50 (February 27, 2003).

  Oudeyer, Pierre-Yves, “The Non-Functional Origins of Phonetic Coding,” paper presented at the From Animals to Animats 7: Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on Simulation of Adaptive Behavior, Edinburgh, Scotland, August 2002.

  ———, “The Origins of Syllable Systems: An Operational Model,” paper presented at the Proceedings of the 23rd International Conference on Cognitive Science, Edinburgh, Scotland, August 2001.

  Özçal1şkan, S., and S. Goldin-Meadow, “Gesture Is at the Cutting Edge of Early Language Development,” Cognition 96 (2005): B101–B13.

  Pääbo, Svante, “The Human Genome and Our View of Ourselves,” Science 291 (2001): 1219–20.

  ———, “The Mosaic That Is Our Genome,” Nature 421 (2003): 409–12.

  Palumbi, Stephen R., “Humans as the World’s Greatest Evolutionary Force,” Science 293(2001): 1786–90.

  Patel, Aniruddh D., “Language, Music, Syntax and the Brain,” Nature Neuroscience 6(2003): 674–81.

  Payne, Katharine, Silent Thunder: In the Presence of Elephants (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1998).

  ———, “The Progressively Changing Songs of Humpback Whales: A Window on the Creative Process in a Wild Animal,” in eds. Björn Merker, Steven Brown, and Nils Lennart Wallin, The Origins of Music (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2000), pp. 135–50.

  ———, “Sources of Social Complexity in the Three Elephant Species,” in eds. Frans B.M. de Waal and Peter L. Tyack, Animal Social Complexity: Intelligence, Culture, and Individualized Societies (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2003).

  Pearce, Toby M., “Did They Talk Their Way Out of Africa?” Behavioral and Brain Sciences 26(2003): 235–36.

  Pennisi, Elizabeth, “Speaking in Tongues,” Science 303 (2004): 1321–23.

  Pepperberg, I. M., and H. R. Shive, “Simultaneous Development of Vocal and Physical Object Combinations by a Grey Parrot (Psittacus erithacus): Bottle Caps, Lids, and Labels,” Journal of Comparative Psychology 115 (2001): 376–84.

  Pepperberg, I. M., and S. E. Wilcox, “Evidence for a Form of Mutual Exclusivity During Label Acquisition by Grey Parrots (Psittacus erithacus)?” Journal of Comparative Psychology 114 (2000): 219–31.

  Peretz, Isabelle, and Max Coltheart, “Modularity of Music Processing,” Nature Neuroscience 6 (2003): 688–91.

  Phillips-Silver, Jessica, and Laurel J. Trainor, “Feeling the Beat: Movement Influences Infant Rhythm Perception,” Science 308 (2005): 1430.

  Piattelli-Palmarini, Massimo, Language and Learning: The Debate Between Jean Piaget and Noam Chomsky (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1980).

  Pinker, Steven, The Language Instinct (New York: William Morrow, 1994).

  ———, How the Mind Works (New York: W. W. Norton, 1999).

  ———, “Talk of Genetics and Vice Versa,” Nature 413 (2001): 465–66.

  ———, The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature (London: Allen Lane, 2002).

  ———, “‘Words and Rules’: An Exchange,” The New York Review of Books 49 (June 27, 2002).

  ———, “‘The Blank Slate’: An Exchange,” The New York Review of Books 50 (May 1, 2003).

  Pinker, Steven, and Paul Bloom, “Natural Language and Natural Selection,” Behavioral and Brain Sciences 13 (1990): 707–84.

  Pinker, Steven, and Ray Jackendoff, “The Faculty of Language: What’s Special About It?” Cognition 95 (2005): 201–36.

  Plotnik, Joshua M., Frans B. M. de Waal, and Diana Reiss, “Self-Recognition in an Asian Elephant,” PNAS 103 (2006): 17053–57.

  Poole, Joyce H., Katherine Payne, William R. Langbauer, Jr., and Cynthia J. Moss, “The Social Context of Some Very Low Frequency Calls of African Elephants,” Behavorial Ecology and Sociobiology 22 (1988): 385–92.

  Poole, Joyce H., Peter L. Tyack, Angela S. Stoeger-Horwath, and Stephanie Watwood, “Animal Behaviour: Elephants Are Capable of Vocal Learning,” Nature 434 (2005): 455–56.

  Poremba, Amy, Megan Malloy, Richard C. Saunders, Richard E. Carson, Peter Herscovitch, and Mortimer Mishkin, “Species-Specific Calls Evoke Asymmetric Activity in the Monkey’s Temporal Poles,” Nature 427 (2004): 448–51.

  Premack, David, “Is Language the Key to Human Intelligence?” Science 303 (2004): 318–20.

 

‹ Prev