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Birds, primates, and spoken language origins: behavioral phenotypes and neurobiological substrates

机译:鸟类,灵长类动物和口头语言的起源:行为表型和神经生物学底物

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Vocal learners such as humans and songbirds can learn to produce elaborate patterns of structurally organized vocalizations, whereas many other vertebrates such as non-human primates and most other bird groups either cannot or do so to a very limited degree. To explain the similarities among humans and vocal-learning birds and the differences with other species, various theories have been proposed. One set of theories are motor theories, which underscore the role of the motor system as an evolutionary substrate for vocal production learning. For instance, the motor theory of speech and song perception proposes enhanced auditory perceptual learning of speech in humans and song in birds, which suggests a considerable level of neurobiological specialization. Another, a motor theory of vocal learning origin, proposes that the brain pathways that control the learning and production of song and speech were derived from adjacent motor brain pathways. Another set of theories are cognitive theories, which address the interface between cognition and the auditory-vocal domains to support language learning in humans. Here we critically review the behavioral and neurobiological evidence for parallels and differences between the so-called vocal learners and vocal non-learners in the context of motor and cognitive theories. In doing so, we note that behaviorally vocal-production learning abilities are more distributed than categorical, as are the auditory-learning abilities of animals. We propose testable hypotheses on the extent of the specializations and cross-species correspondences suggested by motor and cognitive theories. We believe that determining how spoken language evolved is likely to become clearer with concerted efforts in testing comparative data from many non-human animal species.
机译:诸如人类和鸣鸟之类的人声学习者可以学习产生精心组织的发声模式,而诸如非人类灵长类和大多数其他鸟类群之类的许多其他脊椎动物则不能或只能做到非常有限的程度。为了解释人类和语音学习鸟之间的相似性以及与其他物种的区别,提出了各种理论。一组理论是运动理论,强调了运动系统作为声乐生产学习的进化基础的作用。例如,语音和歌曲感知的运动理论提出了人类语音和鸟类歌曲增强的听觉感知学习,这表明神经生物学专业水平相当高。另一个是声乐学习起源的运动理论,提出控制歌曲和语音学习和产生的大脑途径是从相邻的运动脑途径衍生而来的。另一套理论是认知理论,它解决了认知和听觉-声音领域之间的接口,以支持人类的语言学习。在这里,我们对运动和认知理论中所谓的声乐学习者和非声乐学习者之间的相似之处和行为学进行批判性的行为和神经生物学研究。在这样做的过程中,我们注意到,行为上的声音产生学习能力比类别更分散,动物的听觉学习能力也是如此。我们提出了关于运动和认知理论所建议的专业化和跨物种对应程度的可检验假设。我们相信,在测试许多非人类动物物种的比较数据的共同努力下,确定口头语言的发展方式可能会变得更加清晰。

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