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Hominid divergence and speech evolution
Authors:James Hamilton
Affiliation:Department of Zoology, Duke University, Durham, N.C. 27706, U.S.A.
Abstract:Hominids evolved from a population which diverged from other hominoids during the Mio-Pliocene. This population was perhaps forced by ecological conditions and competitive exclusion to rely more on tools, gathering, hunting, vocal communication and memory, under whose mutually positively reinforcing effects the hominids diverged. The ape ancestors may have been forced into the forests (or they may have forced hominids onto the savanna), while hominids adapted to a plains, hunting econiche.Speech was selected for because verbal symbols served as retrieval cues for a large number of complex concepts and were transmissible, and thus could be used to influence food-getting and other behavior by the social group.Speech is dependent on three inherited entities: (1) anatomical and neurological adaptations which allow vocalization of a wide range of phonemes in rapid succession and which allow for (2) duality of patterning, thereby promoting a large number of words, and (3) encoding, which greatly increases the rate at which verbal information transfer can occur. Speech may have evolved through small hominid groups using progressively more phonemes in an increasingly blended manner, with encoding subsequently being selected for. Neandertals apparently could not encode speech and could speak only a restricted range of phonemes. Their expanded cranial capacity may have been selected for to store ambiguous and slowly transmitted verbal data.
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