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Animal Communication in Linguistic and Cognitive Perspective
Title / Series / Name
Annual Review of Linguistics
Publication Volume
9
Publication Issue
1
Pages
Editors
Keywords
Animal communication
Comparative cognition
Washburn
Ladygina-Kohts
Grice
Duality of patterning
Generativity
Comparative cognition
Washburn
Ladygina-Kohts
Grice
Duality of patterning
Generativity
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14018/14159
Abstract
Detailed comparative studies have revealed many surface similarities between linguistic communication and the communication of nonhumans. How should we interpret these discoveries in linguistic and cognitive perspective? We review the literature with a specific focus on analogy (similar features and function but not shared ancestry) and homology (shared ancestry). We conclude that combinatorial features of animal communication are analogous but not homologous to natural language. Homologies are found instead in cognitive capacities of attention manipulation, which are enriched in humans, making possible many distinctive forms of communication, including language use. We therefore present a new, graded taxonomy of means of attention manipulation, including a new class we call Ladyginian, which is related to but slightly broader than the more familiar class of Gricean interaction. Only in the latter do actors have the goal of revealing specifically informative intentions. Great ape interaction may be best characterized as Ladyginian but not Gricean.
Topic
Publisher
Place of Publication
Type
Journal article
Date
2023-01-17
Language
ISBN
Identifiers
10.1146/annurev-linguistics-030421-061233