Language universals at birth
Author
Abstract
The evolution of human languages is driven both by primitive
biases present in the human sensorimotor systems and by cultural
transmission among speakers. However, whether the design of
the language faculty is further shaped by linguistic biological
biases remains controversial. To address this question, we used
near-infrared spectroscopy to examine whether the brain activity
of neonates is sensitive to a putatively universal phonological
constraint. Across languages, syllables like blif are preferred to
both lbif and bdif. Newborn infants (2–5 d old) listening to these
three types of syllables displayed distinct hemodynamic responses
in temporal-perisylvian areas of their left hemisphere. Moreover,
the oxyhemoglobin concentration changes elicited by a syllable
type mirrored both the degree of its preference across languages
and behavioral linguistic preferences documented experimentally
in adulthood. These findings suggest that humans possess early,
experience-independent, linguistic biases concerning syllable structure
that shape language perception and acquisition.
General note
Artìculo de publicaciòn ISI
Patrocinador
The research leading
to these results has received funding from the European Research Council
under the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013)/
European Research Council Grant Agreement 269502 (PASCAL) (to J.M.).
Quote Item
PNAS | April 22, 2014 | vol. 111 | no. 16 | 5837–5841
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