Department of Comparative Language Science, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Center for the Interdisciplinary Study of Language Evolution, Zurich, Switzerland.
Sci Adv. 2020 Oct 21;6(43). doi: 10.1126/sciadv.abb0725. Print 2020 Oct.
The ability to track syntactic relationships between words, particularly over distances ("nonadjacent dependencies"), is a critical faculty underpinning human language, although its evolutionary origins remain poorly understood. While some monkey species are reported to process auditory nonadjacent dependencies, comparative data from apes are missing, complicating inferences regarding shared ancestry. Here, we examined nonadjacent dependency processing in common marmosets, chimpanzees, and humans using "artificial grammars": strings of arbitrary acoustic stimuli composed of adjacent (nonhumans) or nonadjacent (all species) dependencies. Individuals from each species (i) generalized the grammars to novel stimuli and (ii) detected grammatical violations, indicating that they processed the dependencies between constituent elements. Furthermore, there was no difference between marmosets and chimpanzees in their sensitivity to nonadjacent dependencies. These notable similarities between monkeys, apes, and humans indicate that nonadjacent dependency processing, a crucial cognitive facilitator of language, is an ancestral trait that evolved at least ~40 million years before language itself.
能够追踪单词之间的句法关系,特别是远距离的关系(“非相邻依赖”),是人类语言的关键能力,尽管其进化起源仍知之甚少。虽然有报道称一些猴子物种可以处理听觉非相邻依赖关系,但缺少来自类人猿的比较数据,这使得关于共同祖先的推断变得复杂。在这里,我们使用“人工语法”研究了普通狨猴、黑猩猩和人类的非相邻依赖关系处理:由相邻(非人类)或非相邻(所有物种)依赖关系组成的任意声学刺激串。每个物种的个体(i)将语法推广到新的刺激物,以及(ii)检测语法错误,表明他们处理了组成元素之间的依赖关系。此外,狨猴和黑猩猩在对非相邻依赖关系的敏感性方面没有差异。猴子、类人猿和人类之间的这些显著相似性表明,非相邻依赖关系处理,这一语言的关键认知促进因素,是一种至少在语言本身出现之前 4000 万年就进化而来的祖先特征。