Several lines of evidence suggest that human language originated in manual gestures, not vocal calls. These include: (1) the use of the hands as the more natural way to depict events in space and time; (2) the ability of nonhuman primates to use manual action flexibly and intentionally; (3) the nature of the primate mirror system and its homology with the language circuits in the human brain; (4) the relative success in teaching apes to communicate gesturally rather than vocally; (5) the ready invention of sophisticated signed languages by the deaf; (6) the critical role of pointing in the way young children learn language; and (7) the correlation between handedness and cerebral asymmetry for language. The eventual switch to speech miniaturized the system, selected because it freed the hands for other functions, such as carrying things, and the manufacture and use of tools.
2024. Representation, arbitrariness, and the emergence of speech. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences
Źywiczyński, Przemysław & Jordan Zlatev
2024. The Role of Gesture in Debates on the Origins of Language. In The Cambridge Handbook of Gesture Studies, ► pp. 335 ff.
Gafton, Francisc
2021. Synthetic considerations on the origin and emergence of human language. Diacronia :14
Gafton, Francisc
2021. Considerații sintetice asupra originii și apariției limbajului uman. Diacronia :14
Wacewicz, Sławomir & Przemysław Żywiczyński
2021. Pantomimic conceptions of language origins. In The Oxford Handbook of Human Symbolic Evolution,
Miyagawa, Shigeru, Cora Lesure & Vitor A. Nóbrega
2018. Cross-Modality Information Transfer: A Hypothesis about the Relationship among Prehistoric Cave Paintings, Symbolic Thinking, and the Emergence of Language. Frontiers in Psychology 9
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 26 september 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.