Why is Language Unique to Humans?

Mehler, Jacques; Nespor, Marina; Shukla, Mohinish; Peña, Marcela; Chadwick, Derek J.; Diamond, Mathew; Goode, Jamie

Keywords: human language uniqueness, cognitive neuroscience and language acquisition, infants ‘knowledge’ of Universal Grammar (UG), phonological bootstrapping in infants, optical topography and Near Infrared Spectroscopy (NIRS) technology

Abstract

Summary Cognitive neuroscience has focused on language acquisition as one of the main domains to test the respective roles of statistical vs. rule-like computation. Recent studies have uncovered that the brain of human neonates displays a typical signature in response to speech sounds even a few hours after birth. This suggests that neuroscience and linguistics converge on the view that, to a large extent, language acquisition arises due to our genetic endowment. Our research has also shown how statistical dependencies and the ability to draw structural generalizations are basic processes that interact intimately. First, we explore how the rhythmic properties of language bias word segmentation. Second, we demonstrate that natural speech categories play specific roles during language acquisition: some categories are optimally suited to compute statistical dependencies while other categories are optimally suited for the extraction of structural generalizations

Más información

Editorial: Wiley
Fecha de publicación: 2006
Página de inicio: 251
Página final: 284
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.1002/9780470034989