Benítez-Burraco Antonio, Pörtl Daniela, Jung Christoph
Department of Spanish, Linguistics, and Theory of Literature (Linguistics), Faculty of Philology, University of Seville, Seville, Spain.
Psychiatric Department, Saale-Unstrut Klinikum, Teaching Hospital Leipzig and Jena Universities, Naumburg, Germany.
Front Psychol. 2021 Sep 13;12:695116. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.695116. eCollection 2021.
Different factors seemingly account for the emergence of present-day languages in our species. Human self-domestication has been recently invoked as one important force favoring language complexity mostly via a cultural mechanism. Because our self-domestication ultimately resulted from selection for less aggressive behavior and increased prosocial behavior, any evolutionary or cultural change impacting on aggression levels is expected to have fostered this process. Here, we hypothesize about a parallel domestication of humans and dogs, and more specifically, about a positive effect of our interaction with dogs on human self-domestication, and ultimately, on aspects of language evolution, through the mechanisms involved in the control of aggression. We review evidence of diverse sort (ethological mostly, but also archeological, genetic, and physiological) supporting such an effect and propose some ways of testing our hypothesis.
不同因素似乎解释了我们人类中现代语言的出现。人类的自我驯化最近被认为是一种主要通过文化机制促进语言复杂性的重要力量。由于我们的自我驯化最终源于对攻击性较低行为和增强亲社会行为的选择,预计任何影响攻击水平的进化或文化变化都促进了这一过程。在这里,我们假设人类和狗存在平行驯化,更具体地说,我们假设人类与狗的互动通过控制攻击的机制对人类自我驯化产生积极影响,并最终对语言进化的各个方面产生积极影响。我们回顾了各种支持这种影响的证据(主要是行为学证据,但也有考古学、遗传学和生理学证据),并提出了一些检验我们假设的方法。