Dual neurobiological systems underlying language evolution: inferring the ancestral state


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Article
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Authors
Marslen-Wilson, WD 
Abstract

The Dual Neurobiological Systems (DNS) framework places the neurobiological and evolutionary origins of language center-stage, and views the communicative and combinatorial capacities of the modern human as a dynamic coalition of two intersecting but evolutionarily and functionally distinguishable sets of systems. Strong evolutionary continuity between humans and their primate relatives is provided by a distributed, bi-hemispheric set of capacities that support the dynamic interpretation of multi-modal sensory inputs, in the context of social communication between members of the same species. Here we use this set of capacities to derive a neurobiologically constrained approach to the evolution of speech-based communication in the modern human lineage. A key challenge for such an approach is to identify the neurocognitive ancestral state from which the modern dual systems framework emerged

Description
Keywords
5204 Cognitive and Computational Psychology, 52 Psychology, Behavioral and Social Science, Neurosciences
Journal Title
Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences
Conference Name
Journal ISSN
2352-1546
2352-1546
Volume Title
21
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Sponsorship
European Research Council (230570)
Medical Research Council (MC_U105580454)
The writing of this mansucript was supported in part by a European Research Council Advanced Investigator grant to William Marslen-Wilson (AdG 230570 NEUROLEX).