Department of Psychology, University of California, San Diego, USA.
Cognition. 2013 Oct;129(1):1-17. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2013.05.004. Epub 2013 Jun 21.
To what extent does human cognition influence the structure of human language? Recent experiments using elicited pantomime suggest that the prevalence of Subject-Object-Verb (SOV) order across the world's languages may arise in part because SOV order is most compatible with how we conceptually represent transitive events (Goldin-Meadow, So, Özyürek, & Mylander, 2008). However, this raises the question as to why non-SOV orders exist. Two recent studies (Meir, Lifshitz, Ilkbasaran, & Padden, 2010; Gibson et al., 2013) suggest that SOV might be suboptimal for describing events in which both the agent and patient are plausible agents (e.g. a woman pushing a boy); we call these "reversible" events. We replicate these findings using elicited pantomime and offer a new interpretation. Meir et al.'s (2010) account is framed largely in terms of constraints on comprehension, while Gibson et al.'s (2013) account involves minimizing the risk of information loss or memory degradation. We offer an alternative hypothesis that is grounded in constraints on production. We consider the implications of these findings for the distribution of constituent order in the world's spoken languages and for the structure of emerging sign languages.
人类认知在多大程度上影响了人类语言的结构?最近使用诱发手势的实验表明,世界上各种语言中主语-宾语-动词(SOV)语序的普遍存在,部分原因可能是 SOV 语序与我们概念化及表示及物事件的方式最匹配(Goldin-Meadow、So、Özyürek 和 Mylander,2008)。然而,这就引出了一个问题,即为什么会存在非 SOV 语序。最近的两项研究(Meir、Lifshitz、Ilkbasaran 和 Padden,2010;Gibson 等人,2013)表明,SOV 语序可能不太适合描述施事和受事都是可能的施事(例如,一个女人推一个男孩)的事件;我们称这些事件为“可逆”事件。我们使用诱发手势再现了这些发现,并提供了一种新的解释。Meir 等人(2010)的解释主要是基于对理解的限制,而 Gibson 等人(2013)的解释则涉及最小化信息丢失或记忆退化的风险。我们提出了一个替代假设,该假设基于对产生的限制。我们考虑了这些发现对世界上口语语言中成分顺序分布的影响,以及对新兴手语结构的影响。