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No Country for Oldowan Men: Emerging Factors in Language Evolution
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Why Brain Oscillations Are Improving Our Understanding of Language
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Acquiring the Impossible: Developmental Stages of Copredication
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The Human Oscillome and Its Explanatory Potential
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In: BIOLINGUISTICS; Vol. 10 (2016); 006-020 ; 1450-3417 (2016)
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Phasal Eliminativism, Anti-Lexicalism, and the Status of the Unarticulated
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In: BIOLINGUISTICS; Vol. 10 (2016); 021-050 ; 1450-3417 (2016)
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Language impairments in asd resulting from a failed domestication of the human brain
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Language Impairments in ASD Resulting from a Failed Domestication of the Human Brain
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The oscillopathic nature of language deficits in autism : from genes to language evolution
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Bridging the gap between genes and language deficits in schizophrenia : an oscillopathic approach
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Language Impairments in ASD Resulting from a Failed Domestication of the Human Brain
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Bridging the Gap between Genes and Language Deficits in Schizophrenia: An Oscillopathic Approach
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The Oscillopathic Nature of Language Deficits in Autism: From Genes to Language Evolution
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Labels, cognomes, and cyclic computation: an ethological perspective
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Abstract:
For the past two decades, it has widely been assumed by linguists that there is a single computational operation, Merge, which is unique to language, distinguishing it from other cognitive domains. The intention of this paper is to progress the discussion of language evolution in two ways: (i) survey what the ethological record reveals about the uniqueness of the human computational system, and (ii) explore how syntactic theories account for what ethology may determine to be human-specific. It is shown that the operation Label, not Merge, constitutes the evolutionary novelty which distinguishes human language from non-human computational systems; a proposal lending weight to a Weak Continuity Hypothesis and leading to the formation of what is termed Computational Ethology. Some directions for future ethological research are suggested.
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Keyword:
Psychology
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URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4453271/ http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26089809 https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00715
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