Department of English Language and Applied Linguistics, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK.
Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, USA.
Sci Rep. 2018 Feb 8;8(1):2634. doi: 10.1038/s41598-018-20961-6.
The innovation of iconic gestures is essential to establishing the vocabularies of signed languages, but might iconicity also play a role in the origin of spoken words? Can people create novel vocalizations that are comprehensible to naïve listeners without prior convention? We launched a contest in which participants submitted non-linguistic vocalizations for 30 meanings spanning actions, humans, animals, inanimate objects, properties, quantifiers and demonstratives. The winner was determined by the ability of naïve listeners to infer the meanings of the vocalizations. We report a series of experiments and analyses that evaluated the vocalizations for: (1) comprehensibility to naïve listeners; (2) the degree to which they were iconic; (3) agreement between producers and listeners in iconicity; and (4) whether iconicity helps listeners learn the vocalizations as category labels. The results show contestants were able to create successful iconic vocalizations for most of the meanings, which were largely comprehensible to naïve listeners, and easier to learn as category labels. These findings demonstrate how iconic vocalizations can enable interlocutors to establish understanding in the absence of conventions. They suggest that, prior to the advent of full-blown spoken languages, people could have used iconic vocalizations to ground a spoken vocabulary with considerable semantic breadth.
标志性手势的创新对于建立手语词汇至关重要,但标志性手势是否也在口语词的起源中发挥了作用?人们能否在没有先前惯例的情况下创造出新颖的、能被天真听众理解的发音?我们举办了一场比赛,参赛者为 30 个跨越动作、人类、动物、无生命物体、属性、量词和指示词的含义提交非语言发音。天真听众推断发音含义的能力决定了获胜者。我们报告了一系列实验和分析,评估了发音的:(1)对天真听众的可理解性;(2)它们的标志性程度;(3)生产者和听众之间标志性的一致性;以及(4)标志性是否有助于听众将发音作为类别标签学习。结果表明,参赛者能够为大多数含义创造出成功的标志性发音,这些发音对天真听众来说大部分是可理解的,并且更容易作为类别标签学习。这些发现表明,在完整的口语语言出现之前,人们可能已经使用标志性发音来为具有相当语义广度的口语词汇奠定基础。