Fitch W Tecumseh
Department of Cognitive Biology, University of Vienna Vienna, Austria.
Front Evol Neurosci. 2011 Dec 23;3:9. doi: 10.3389/fnevo.2011.00009. eCollection 2011.
The evolution of language required elaboration of a number of independent mechanisms in the hominin lineage, including systems involved in signaling, semantics, and syntax. Two perspectives on the evolution of syntax can be contrasted. The "continuist" perspective seeks the evolutionary roots of complex human syntax in simpler combinatory systems used in animal communication systems, such as iteration and sequencing. The "exaptationist" perspective posits evolutionary change of function, so that systems today used for linguistic communication might previously have served quite different functions in earlier hominids. I argue that abundant biological evidence supports an exaptationist perspective, in general, and that it must be taken seriously when considering language evolution. When applied to syntax, this suggests that core computational components used today in language could have originally served non-linguistic functions such as motor control, non-verbal thought, or spatial reasoning. I outline three specific exaptationist hypotheses for spoken language. These three hypotheses each posit a change of functionality in a precursor circuit, and its transformation into a neural circuit or region specifically involved in language today. Hypothesis 1 suggests that the precursor mechanism for intentional vocal control, specifically direct cortical control over the larynx, was manual motor control subserved by the cortico-spinal tract. The second is that the arcuate fasciculus, which today connects syntactic and lexical regions, had its origin in intracortical connections subserving vocal imitation. The third is that the specialized components of Broca's area, specifically BA 45, had their origins in non-linguistic motor control, and specifically hierarchical planning of action. I conclude by illustrating the importance of both homology (studied via primates) and convergence (typically analyzed in birds) for testing such evolutionary hypotheses.
语言的演化需要在人科动物谱系中发展出许多独立的机制,包括与信号、语义和句法相关的系统。关于句法演化可以对比两种观点。“连续主义”观点在动物交流系统中使用的更简单的组合系统,如迭代和排序中寻找复杂人类句法的演化根源。“扩展适应主义”观点假定功能发生了演化变化,因此如今用于语言交流的系统在早期原始人类中可能曾发挥截然不同的功能。我认为,总体而言,大量生物学证据支持扩展适应主义观点,并且在考虑语言演化时必须认真对待这一观点。当应用于句法时,这表明如今在语言中使用的核心计算组件最初可能服务于非语言功能,如运动控制、非语言思维或空间推理。我概述了关于口语的三个具体的扩展适应主义假设。这三个假设各自假定了一个前体回路中功能的变化,以及其转变为如今专门参与语言的神经回路或区域。假设1表明,有意发声控制的前体机制,特别是皮层对喉部的直接控制,是由皮质脊髓束提供支持的手动运动控制。第二个假设是,如今连接句法和词汇区域的弓状束起源于支持发声模仿的皮质内连接。第三个假设是,布罗卡区的专门组件,特别是BA45,起源于非语言运动控制,特别是动作的分层规划。我通过说明同源性(通过灵长类动物研究)和趋同性(通常在鸟类中分析)对于检验此类演化假设的重要性来得出结论。