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DEFINITIONS HUMAN AND ANIMAL LANGUAGES

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Presentation on theme: "DEFINITIONS HUMAN AND ANIMAL LANGUAGES"— Presentation transcript:

1 DEFINITIONS HUMAN AND ANIMAL LANGUAGES
WHAT IS LANGUAGE? DEFINITIONS HUMAN AND ANIMAL LANGUAGES

2 Different definitions for different purposes
Language as a system as a universal human capacity as a means of communication as a social phenomenon

3 HUMAN AND ANIMAL LANGUAGES The issue of continuity
Are humans just a step further in practising an adapted behaviour? What are the similarities and differences in human and animal communication? Are they qualitative or quantitave? - measurable? - origin?

4 Animal communication Through sounds, smells,
visual signals and touching: - of birds, bees, ants, bears and dogs

5 Mixed signals Species-specific (cats and dogs)

6 Why are vocal signals easier to use?
Work from a distance: sender and receiver do not have to be close Work in the dark Receiver does not have to turn toward sender Can be used simultaneously with other activities

7 What determines the nature of signals?
Higher position on the evolutionary scale? - Of birds and chimpanzees Social activity? - Of cuckoos, bees and ancient hunters

8 Differences (Hocket) Use of sound signals - vocal auditory channel
Rapidly fading signal - special types of memory

9 Total feedback - hearing our voice - talking to ourselves - difficult for the deaf Interchangeabilty - male crickets chirp - working bees dance - male pheasants’ mating dance Specialisation - only for communication

10 - animal communication:limited set of signs, triggered by a stimulus
Openness, creativity - animal communication:limited set of signs, triggered by a stimulus - human language constantly changes, new items are added, is freely applied

11 - animals: often connection between signal
Arbitrariness - animals: often connection between signal and meaning - humans: no connection, interpretation is based on consensus “When I use a word,” Humpty Dumpty said in a rather scornful tone, “it means just what I choose it to mean – neither more not less.” (Lewis Carroll: Alice in Wonderland)

12 Discreteness Duality Patterning - bats, stabs but NOT sbat
- boathouse vs. Houseboat - Jack kissed Mary. Vs. Mary kissed Jack but NOT Kissed Jack Mary “But I’m not so think as you drunk I am.” (Sir J.C. Squire, writer)

13 Functionality, intention - cause, purpose consideration
- dolphins, Washoe and Sara

14 “Bees are not as busy as we think they are. They just
Displacement “Bees are not as busy as we think they are. They just can’t buzz any slower.” (F.M. Hubbard, American humorist) NO - past - future - questions Prevarification - lies

15 - talking about language
Reflexiveness - talking about language Traditional transmission - genetically imprinted behaviour vs. socioculturally transmitted

16 What is language? Systematic and generative A set of arbitrary symbols
Primarily verbal signals but also visual Conventionalised meanings Used for communication only Operates in a speech community Essentially human Both language and language learning have universal features


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