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Speech and Language. Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD. Thinking and Language. Language is the ability to encode ideas into signals for communication Nothing is more human than speech. Language is the most complex everyday human behavior. 100 muscles work at any given time for speech
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Speech and Language Dr Derakhshandeh, PhD
Thinking and Language Language is the ability to encode ideas into signals for communication Nothing is more human than speech
Language is the most complex everyday human behavior • 100 muscles work at any given time for speech • For each of these there are about 100 nerve endings • We produce 14 sounds per second • (100 x 100 x 14=140,000 nerve-to-muscle events each second of conversational speech
more than 6,000 languages exist • it is incomprehensible to suggest: language could be viewed as some sort of simple, clear-cut addition to human physiology made possible by an enlarged brain unique to Homo sapiens
The central ideas of evolution • The life has a history • Changed over time • Different species share common ancestors
DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) • DNA is the double-stranded molecule that contains the genetic code • Jared Diamond suggests: • the amount of DNA similarity is a key indicator of the closeness to other primates, esp., the Bonobos
Common and pygmy chimps differ in 0.7% DNA • Gorillas differ in 2.3%
Humans and chimps differ in 1.6% (98.4% the same) • Gorillas separated from chimps before humans did
DNA • One of the ways we determine closeness with other primates • Closest primates are: • Bonobo (pygmy) • chimpanzees • Gorilla • Orangutan
the genetic distances between HominoidsChimpanzees are actually closer to humans genetically than to Orangutans and the same genetic distance from GorillasOrangutans are the most different from humans genetically yet relatively closer to Chimpanzees
A polygenetic ormonogenetic linguistic origin? • Monogenesis? • A single location from which all humans emerged • Polygenesis? • More than one location • but similar development in each site
Speech begins… When? • By at least 30,000 years ago: • humans speech was fully modern • Begins between Australopithecines and Homo habilus (between 4M B.P. and 700,000B.P.)
Were there other human species? • Homo habilis • About 5 foot tall • average brain size 650cc, much larger than Australopithecines • Brain organization may have included an area for speech (Broca's area)
Australopithecus afarensis • 3.5 to 4 foot tall, known as "Lucy“ • Pelvis and legs more like humans but skull chimp like • Protruding mouth, small brained, canines project slightly
Basic biological aspects of human language: • Brain • Cerebral • Left hemisphere • Corpus callosum • Neo-Cortex • Broca’s Area • Wernicke’s Area • Angular Gyrus
Comprehension of speech Controls the muscles of the lips, jaw, tongue, vocal cord,…
Basic biological aspects of human language: Voice Box • Hyoid Bone • Larynx • Trachea • Tongue • Oral/Nasal Cavity
Sound • Sound is produced when air flowing from the lungs passes into the voice box • through the gap made by the vocal cords, which open and close like a valve • During speech, the vocal cords vibrate as air passes through them • releasing a rapid series of puffs into the vocal tract • determines the pitch of a person's voice • the faster the rate, the higher the pitch
Sound systems • The human upper respiratory tract made speech possible • as the high larynx seen in species like the chimp dropped • creating an expanded pharynx in human
Unfortunately: "speech does not fossilize" • notes anthropologist John Shea of the State University of New York: • Writing appears 6000 years ago • there is scant evidence for the existence of notation before 13,000 years ago • How long might LANGUAGE have been around before that?
Fossils: the brain capacity • Is rawfor complex LANGUAGE • with the necessary mouth and throat anatomy • were probably in place before 150,000 years ago • But most of the behaviors thought to depend on LANGUAGE did not appear until 40,000 years ago • tools, burials, living sites, and occasional hints of art and social organization • "Everybody would accept that by 40,000 years ago, LANGUAGE is everywhere" (Stanford University archaeologist Richard Klein)
Delayed takeoff. The anatomy needed for speech was in place before 150,000 years ago, but the signs of complex language don't proliferate until around 40,000 years ago
Where/When was the first Language? • What does comparative linguistics tell us? • What does an analysis of human mitochondrial DNA tell us?
The term Proto-World language • the hypothetical latest common ancestor of all the world's languages • an ancient language • all modern languages • and language families • Including all known dead languages • would have been spoken roughly 200,000 years ago
The Origin of Language • Merritt Ruhlen: • Suggests that if you go systematically back and compare cognates • you can eventually find a common relationship among all languages • Says that mitochondrial DNA analysis suggests that it is true • Critics suggest: • that it is too easy to mistake words that are not cognatic as cognates
Proto-World language • Chinese shui 'water' • Quechua sut'u 'wet' • French suée 'sweat' • Greek hudor 'water' • Dutch schuit 'boat' • Turkish su 'water'
Proto-World language • Chinese nü 'woman' Quechua ñusta 'princess' Dutch nuf 'aloof girl' Greek (gy)ne 'woman' Latin (femi)na 'woman' French nana 'woman' German -in fem. suffix
Are there any answers inlanguage acquisition theory? Critical Age hypothesis: • Order of language development • Babbling • One-word stage • Two-word stage • Telegraphic speech • Orderly addition of grammar • Orderly addition of cognitive concepts
A new stage in human evolution • The origin of language • the beginning of culture, including art, desire, and the sacred • new forms of social organization which are radically different from animal • language is so radically different from animal communication systems • its origin must have been a singular event • Since this event leaves no fossil record • only hypothesize about the conditions of its origin
For archaeologists eager to learn how we became human • when and how LANGUAGE emerged is a crucial question