Evolution of Communicative Flexibility 在线电子书 图书标签:
发表于2024-11-30
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Ch4,5*(vocalization neurobiology)
评分Ch4,5*(vocalization neurobiology)
评分Ch4,5*(vocalization neurobiology)
评分Ch4,5*(vocalization neurobiology)
评分Ch4,5*(vocalization neurobiology)
D. Kimbrough Oller is Professor and Plough Chair of Excellence in the School of Audiology and Speech-Language Pathology at the University of Memphis and an external faculty member of the Konrad Lorenz Institute for Evolution and Cognition Research, Altenberg, Austria. He is coeditor, with Ulrike Griebel, of Evolution of Communications Systems: A Comparative Approach (MIT Press, 2004).
Ulrike Griebel is an adjunct faculty member of the Department of Biology at the University of Memphis. Oller and a member of the Konrad Lorenz Institute for Evolution and Cognition Research, Altenberg, Austria. He is coeditor, with D. Kimbrough Oller of Evolution of Communications Systems: A Comparative Approach (MIT Press, 2004).
The evolutionary roots of human communication are difficult to trace, but recent comparative research suggests that the first key step in that evolutionary history may have been the establishment of basic communicative flexibility—the ability to vocalize freely combined with the capability to coordinate vocalization with communicative intent. The contributors to this volume investigate how some species (particularly ancient hominids) broke free of the constraints of "fixed signals," actions that were evolved to communicate but lack the flexibility of language—a newborn infant's cry, for example, always signals distress and has a stereotypical form not modifiable by the crying baby. Fundamentally, the contributors ask what communicative flexibility is and what evolutionary conditions can produce it.
The accounts offered in these chapters are notable for taking the question of language origins farther back in evolutionary time than in much previous work. Many contributors address the very earliest communicative break of the hominid line from the primate background; others examine the evolutionary origins of flexibility in, for example, birds and marine mammals. The volume's interdisciplinary theoretical perspectives illuminate issues that are on the cutting edge of recent research on this topic.
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Evolution of Communicative Flexibility 在线电子书 pdf 下载 txt下载 epub 下载 mobi 下载 2024