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1 April 2011 Biological Adaptations for Functional Features of Language in the Face of Cultural Evolution
Morten H. Christiansen, Florencia Reali, Nick Chater
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Abstract

Although there may be no true language universals, it is nonetheless possible to discern several family resemblance patterns across the languages of the world. Recent work on the cultural evolution of language indicates the source of these patterns is unlikely to be an innate universal grammar evolved through biological adaptations for arbitrary linguistic features. Instead, it has been suggested that the patterns of resemblance emerge because language has teen shaped by the brain, with individual languages representing different but partially overlapping solutions to the same set of nonlinguistic constraints. Here, we use computational simulations to investigate whether biological adaptation for functional features of language, deriving from cognitive and communicative constraints, may nonetheless te possible alongside rapid cultural evolution. Specifically, we focus on the Baldwin effect as an evolutionary mechanism by which previously learned linguistic features might become innate through natural selection across many generations of language users. The results indicate that cultural evolution of language does not necessarily prevent functional features of language from becoming genetically fixed, thus potentially providing a particularly informative source of constraints on cross-linguistic resemblance patterns.

© 2011 Wayne State University Press, Detroit. Michigan 48201-1309
Morten H. Christiansen, Florencia Reali, and Nick Chater "Biological Adaptations for Functional Features of Language in the Face of Cultural Evolution," Human Biology 83(2), 247-259, (1 April 2011). https://doi.org/10.3378/027.083.0206
Received: 1 April 2010; Accepted: 28 September 2010; Published: 1 April 2011
KEYWORDS
BALDWIN EFFECT
Coevolution
LANGUAGE EVOLUTION
LANGUAGE UNIVERSALS
UNIVERAL GRAMMAR
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