Abstract

Although the sign languages in use today are full human languages, certain of the features they share with gestures have been suggested to provide information about possible origins of human language. These features include sharing common articulators with gestures, and exhibiting substantial iconicity in comparison to spoken languages. If human proto-language was gestural, the question remains of how a highly iconic manual communication system might have been transformed into a primarily vocal communication system in which the links between symbol and referent are for the most part arbitrary. The hypothesis presented here focuses on a class of signs which exhibit: “echo phonology,” a repertoire of mouth actions which are characterized by “echoing” on the mouth certain of the articulatory actions of the hands. The basic features of echo phonology are introduced, and discussed in relation to various types of data. Echo phonology provides naturalistic examples of a possible mechanism accounting for part of the evolution of language, with evidence both of the transfer of manual actions to oral ones and the conversion of units of an iconic manual communication system into a largely arbitrary vocal communication system.

Highlights

  • In the past 50 years, the study of how human language evolved has again become a prominent feature of linguistic discourse

  • The only differences in activation between Disambiguating mouth (DM) and EP signs were found in the temporal lobe, with echo phonology demonstrating relatively greater posterior activation in both hemispheres than DM

  • The phenomenon appears to be fairly common across different sign languages

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Summary

Bencie Woll *

Cognition and Language Research Centre, University College London, London, UK. The sign languages in use today are full human languages, certain of the features they share with gestures have been suggested to provide information about possible origins of human language. These features include sharing common articulators with gestures, and exhibiting substantial iconicity in comparison to spoken languages. Echo phonology provides naturalistic examples of a possible mechanism accounting for part of the evolution of language, with evidence both of the transfer of manual actions to oral ones and the conversion of units of an iconic manual communication system into a largely arbitrary vocal communication system

INTRODUCTION
CONTEMPORARY EVIDENCE
HANDS AND MOUTH IN SIGN LANGUAGE
Bilabial stop Bilabial nasal Glottal stop
Englishderived mouth
Man m
Findings
CONCLUSIONS
Full Text
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