Auditory perception and the evolution of speech |
| |
Authors: | P. K. Kuhl |
| |
Affiliation: | (1) Department of Sprecht Hearing Sciences, University of Washington, 98195 Seattle, Washington, USA |
| |
Abstract: | Among topics related to the evolution of language, the evolution of speech is particularly fascinating. Early theorists believed that it was the ability to produce articulate speech that set the stage for the evolution of the «special» speech processing abilities that exist in modern-day humans. Prior to the evolution of speech production, speech processing abilities were presumed not to exist. The data reviewed here support a different view. Two lines of evidence, one from young human infants and the other from infrahuman species, neither of whom can produce articulate speech, show that in the absence of speech production capabilities, the perception of speech sounds is robust and sophisticated. Human infants and non-human animals evidence auditory perceptual categories that conform to those defined by the phonetic categories of language. These findings suggest the possibility that in evolutionary history the ability to perceive rudimentary speech categories preceded the ability to produce articulate speech. This in turn suggests that it may be audition that structured, at least initially, the formation of phonetic categories. |
| |
Keywords: | speech perception language evolution infants nonhuman primates |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|