Creanza Nicole, Ruhlen Merritt, Pemberton Trevor J, Rosenberg Noah A, Feldman Marcus W, Ramachandran Sohini
Department of Biology and.
Department of Anthropology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2015 Feb 3;112(5):1265-72. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1424033112. Epub 2015 Jan 20.
Worldwide patterns of genetic variation are driven by human demographic history. Here, we test whether this demographic history has left similar signatures on phonemes-sound units that distinguish meaning between words in languages-to those it has left on genes. We analyze, jointly and in parallel, phoneme inventories from 2,082 worldwide languages and microsatellite polymorphisms from 246 worldwide populations. On a global scale, both genetic distance and phonemic distance between populations are significantly correlated with geographic distance. Geographically close language pairs share significantly more phonemes than distant language pairs, whether or not the languages are closely related. The regional geographic axes of greatest phonemic differentiation correspond to axes of genetic differentiation, suggesting that there is a relationship between human dispersal and linguistic variation. However, the geographic distribution of phoneme inventory sizes does not follow the predictions of a serial founder effect during human expansion out of Africa. Furthermore, although geographically isolated populations lose genetic diversity via genetic drift, phonemes are not subject to drift in the same way: within a given geographic radius, languages that are relatively isolated exhibit more variance in number of phonemes than languages with many neighbors. This finding suggests that relatively isolated languages are more susceptible to phonemic change than languages with many neighbors. Within a language family, phoneme evolution along genetic, geographic, or cognate-based linguistic trees predicts similar ancestral phoneme states to those predicted from ancient sources. More genetic sampling could further elucidate the relative roles of vertical and horizontal transmission in phoneme evolution.
全球遗传变异模式受人类人口历史驱动。在此,我们测试这种人口历史是否在音素(即区分语言中单词意义的语音单位)上留下了与在基因上留下的类似特征。我们联合并并行分析了来自全球2082种语言的音素库以及来自全球246个人口群体的微卫星多态性。在全球范围内,群体之间的遗传距离和音素距离均与地理距离显著相关。地理上相近的语言对共享的音素明显多于距离较远的语言对,无论这些语言是否密切相关。音素分化最大的区域地理轴与遗传分化轴相对应,这表明人类迁徙与语言变异之间存在关联。然而,音素库大小的地理分布并不遵循人类从非洲扩张期间的连续奠基者效应的预测。此外,尽管地理上隔离的群体通过遗传漂变失去遗传多样性,但音素不会以相同方式受到漂变影响:在给定地理半径内,相对隔离的语言在音素数量上的方差比有许多相邻语言的方差更大。这一发现表明,相对隔离的语言比有许多相邻语言的语言更容易发生音素变化。在一个语系内,沿着遗传、地理或基于同源关系的语言树进行的音素演化预测的祖先音素状态与从古代来源预测的相似。更多的基因采样可以进一步阐明垂直和水平传播在音素演化中的相对作用。