Title of article
Age of acquisition predicts rate of lexical evolution
Author/Authors
Monaghan، نويسنده , , Padraic، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
5
From page
530
To page
534
Abstract
The processes taking place during language acquisition are proposed to influence language evolution. However, evidence demonstrating the link between language learning and language evolution is, at best, indirect, constituting studies of laboratory-based artificial language learning studies or computational simulations of diachronic change. In the current study, a direct link between acquisition and evolution is established, showing that for two hundred fundamental vocabulary items, the age at which words are acquired is a predictor of the rate at which they have changed in studies of language evolution. Early-acquired words are more salient and easier to process than late-acquired words, and these early-acquired words are also more stably represented within the community’s language. Analysing the properties of these early-acquired words potentially provides insight into the origins of communication, highlighting features of words that have been ultra-conserved in language.
Keywords
Age of acquisition , Communication origins , Language acquisition , Language evolution , Vocabulary structure
Journal title
Cognition
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Cognition
Record number
2078234
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