Griebel Ulrike, Oller D Kimbrough
School of Communication Sciences and Disorders, The University of Memphis, Memphis, TN, United States.
The Institute for Intelligent Systems, University of Memphis, Memphis, TN, United States.
Front Psychol. 2024 Apr 2;15:1135288. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1135288. eCollection 2024.
The quest for the origins of language is a diverse enterprise, where research from a variety of disciplines brings area-specific ideas and area-specific terminology to bear. This variety often results in misunderstandings and misconceptions about communication in various species. In the present paper, we argue for focus on emotional systems as the primary motivators for social signals in animals in general. This focus can help resolve discrepancies of interpretation among different areas of inquiry and can illuminate distinctions among different social signals as well as their phylogenetic origins in animals and especially in humans. We advocate, following Jaak Panksepp, a view wherein the Seeking System, the endogenous tendency to search and explore, is the most fundamental emotional motivation. The Seeking System forms the basis for flexible, voluntary, and exploratory control of motor systems and makes much of learning possible. The relative lack of vocal learning and expression in nonhuman primates contrasted with extensive vocal learning and expression in humans began, we propose, with the evolution in ancient hominins of a necessary foundation for the many subsequent capabilities required for language. That foundation was, according to the reasoning, naturally selected in the form of neurological connections between the Seeking System and mechanisms of glottal/phonatory control. The new connections allowed ancient hominins to develop flexible, endogenous vocal fitness signals produced at very high rates and including large numbers of discrete syllables, recombinable to form syllable combinations with many prosodic variations. The increasing sociality of hominins supported evolution of massive expansion in the utilization of these flexible vocal forms to allow development of words and sentences.
对语言起源的探索是一项多元化的事业,来自各种学科的研究带来了特定领域的观点和特定领域的术语。这种多样性常常导致对各种物种交流的误解和错误观念。在本文中,我们主张将重点放在情感系统上,将其作为一般动物社会信号的主要驱动因素。这种重点有助于解决不同研究领域之间的解释差异,并能阐明不同社会信号之间的区别以及它们在动物尤其是人类中的系统发育起源。我们赞同雅克·潘克塞普的观点,即寻求系统,也就是搜索和探索的内在倾向,是最基本的情感动机。寻求系统构成了对运动系统进行灵活、自主和探索性控制的基础,并使大量学习成为可能。我们提出,与人类广泛的发声学习和表达相比,非人类灵长类动物相对缺乏发声学习和表达,这始于古代原始人类进化出语言所需的许多后续能力的必要基础。根据推理,这个基础是以寻求系统与声门/发声控制机制之间的神经连接形式自然选择的。这些新连接使古代原始人类能够产生灵活的、内在的发声适应性信号,这些信号产生速度非常快,包括大量离散音节,可重新组合形成具有许多韵律变化的音节组合。原始人类日益增强的社会性支持了这些灵活发声形式在使用上的大规模扩展的进化,从而促进了单词和句子的发展。