Cornish Hannah, Dale Rick, Kirby Simon, Christiansen Morten H
Department of Psychology, The University of Stirling, Stirling, United Kingdom.
Cognitive and Information Sciences, University of California-Merced, Merced, CA, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Jan 24;12(1):e0168532. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0168532. eCollection 2017.
Human language is composed of sequences of reusable elements. The origins of the sequential structure of language is a hotly debated topic in evolutionary linguistics. In this paper, we show that sets of sequences with language-like statistical properties can emerge from a process of cultural evolution under pressure from chunk-based memory constraints. We employ a novel experimental task that is non-linguistic and non-communicative in nature, in which participants are trained on and later asked to recall a set of sequences one-by-one. Recalled sequences from one participant become training data for the next participant. In this way, we simulate cultural evolution in the laboratory. Our results show a cumulative increase in structure, and by comparing this structure to data from existing linguistic corpora, we demonstrate a close parallel between the sets of sequences that emerge in our experiment and those seen in natural language.
人类语言由可重复使用的元素序列组成。语言序列结构的起源是进化语言学中一个备受争议的话题。在本文中,我们表明,具有类似语言统计特性的序列集可以在基于块的记忆限制压力下通过文化进化过程出现。我们采用了一种本质上非语言且非交流的新颖实验任务,参与者在其中接受训练,随后被要求逐一回忆一组序列。一名参与者回忆的序列成为下一名参与者的训练数据。通过这种方式,我们在实验室中模拟文化进化。我们的结果显示结构的累积增加,通过将这种结构与现有语言语料库的数据进行比较,我们证明了在我们的实验中出现的序列集与自然语言中出现的序列集之间存在密切的相似性。