The Language Phenomenon: Human Communication from Milliseconds to Millennia

The Language Phenomenon: Human Communication from Milliseconds to Millennia

The Language Phenomenon: Human Communication from Milliseconds to Millennia

The Language Phenomenon: Human Communication from Milliseconds to Millennia

Hardcover(2013)

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Overview

This volume contains a contemporary, integrated description of the processes of language. These range from fast scales (fractions of a second) to slow ones (over a million years). The contributors, all experts in their fields, address language in the brain, production of sentences and dialogues, language learning, transmission and evolutionary processes that happen over centuries or millenia, the relation between language and genes, the origins of language, self-organization, and language competition and death. The book as a whole will help to show how processes at different scales affect each other, thus presenting language as a dynamic, complex and profoundly human phenomenon.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783642360855
Publisher: Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Publication date: 04/06/2013
Series: The Frontiers Collection
Edition description: 2013
Pages: 251
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.20(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Philippe Binder is a Professor of Physics at the University of Hawaii at Hilo and a Faculty Fellow at the New England Complex Systems Institute. His areas of interest are chaos and complex systems, including multiscale analysis. He received his advanced training at Yale and Oxford. Like millions of people worldwide, he is trilingual.
Kenny Smith is a Lecturer in the Language Evolution and Computation Research Unit, School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences, University of Edinburgh, with interests in the evolution of communication, human language and the human capacity for language. He uses a mix of modeling and experimental techniques to address these questions.

Table of Contents

Introduction.-Neurobiology: Language by, in, through and across the brain.- Dialogue.- Learning: Statistical mechanisms in language acquisition.- Evolution:  Language use and the evolution of languages.- Transitions: The evolution of linguistic replicators.- Genes: Interactions with language on three levels.- Language in Nature: On the evolutionary roots of a cultural phenomenon.- Self-Organization: Complex dynamical systems in the evolution of speech.- Environment: Language ecology and language death.- Conclusions.

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