Language trees ?gene trees
详细信息    查看全文
  • 作者:James Steele (1)
    Anne Kandler (1)
  • 关键词:Cultural transmission ; Cultural phylogenetics ; Language shift ; Scottish Gaelic
  • 刊名:Theory in Biosciences
  • 出版年:2010
  • 出版时间:September 2010
  • 年:2010
  • 卷:129
  • 期:2-3
  • 页码:223-233
  • 全文大小:343KB
  • 参考文献:1. Abrams DM, Strogatz SH (2003) Modeling the dynamics of language death. Nature 424:900. doi:10.1038/424900a CrossRef
    2. Aikhenvald AY (2001) Areal diffusion, genetic inheritance, and problems of subgrouping: a North Arawak case study. In: Aikhenvald AY, Dixon RMW (eds) Areal diffusion and genetic inheritance. Oxford University Press, Oxford, pp 167-94
    3. Aikhenvald AY (2002) Language contact in Amazonia. Oxford University Press, Oxford
    4. Bellwood P (2005) First farmers. Blackwell Publishing, Oxford
    5. Borgerhoff Mulder M, Nunn CL, Towner MC (2006) Cultural macroevolution and the transmission of traits. Evol Anthropol 15:52-4. doi:10.1002/evan.20088 CrossRef
    6. Boyd R, Richerson PJ (1985) Culture and the evolutionary process. Chicago University Press, Chicago
    7. Boyd R, Richerson PJ (2009) Voting with your feet: payoff biased migration and the evolution of group beneficial behavior. J Theor Biol 257:331-39. doi:10.1016/j.jtbi.2008.12.007 CrossRef
    8. Campbell L (2006) Languages and genes in collaboration: some practical matters. Paper presented at language and genes: an interdisciplinary conference, University of California, Santa Barbara, Sept 8-0, 2006. http://www.humis.utah.edu/humis/docs/organization_919_1166141662.pdf. Accessed 21 September 2009
    9. Cavalli-Sforza LL, Feldman MW (1981) Cultural transmission and evolution: a quantitative approach. Princeton University Press, Princeton
    10. Cavalli-Sforza LL, Piazza A, Menozzi P, Mountain J (1988) Reconstruction of human evolution: bringing together genetic, archaeological, and linguistic data. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 85:6002-006 CrossRef
    11. Cavalli-Sforza LL, Minch E, Mountain J (1992) Coevolution of genes and languages revisited. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 89:5620-624 CrossRef
    12. Croft W (2003) Social evolution and language change. http://www.unm.edu/~wcroft/Papers/SocLing.pdf. Accessed 21 September 2009
    13. Diamond J, Bellwood P (2003) Farmers and their languages: the first expansions. Science 300:597-03. doi:10.1126/science.1078208 CrossRef
    14. Dorian N (1998) Western language ideologies and small language prospects. In: Grenoble LA, Whaley LJ (eds) Endangered languages: current issues and future prospects. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp 3-1
    15. Dorian N (2006) Using a private-sphere language for a public-sphere purpose: some hard lessons from making a television documentary in a dying dialect. Paper presented at Bryn Mawr College, 16 March. www.brynmawr.edu/emeritus/gather/Dorian.doc. Accessed 21 September 2009
    16. Duke DJ (2001) Aka as a contact language: sociolinguistic and grammatical evidence. M. A. (Linguistics) thesis, University of Texas at Arlington. http://www.silcam.org/download.php?sstid=030401&file=CompleteThesis-DDuke.pdf. Accessed 21 September 2009
    17. Evans N, McConvell P (1998) The enigma of Pama-Nyungan expansion in Australia. In: Blench R, Spriggs M (eds) Archaeology and language II. Routledge, London, pp 174-92 CrossRef
    18. Fort J, Pérez-Losada J, Su?ol JJ, Escoda L, Massaneda JM (2008) Integro-difference equations for interacting species and the Neolithic transition. New J Phys 10:043045. doi:10.1088/1367-2630/10/4/043045 CrossRef
    19. Gilbert S (2003) Opening Darwin’s black box: teaching evolution through developmental genetics. Nat Rev Genet 4:735-41. doi:10.1038/nrg1159 CrossRef
    20. Grenoble LA, Whaley LJ (2006) Saving languages: an introduction to language revitalisation. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge
    21. Hayward J (2005) A general model of church growth and decline. J Math Sociol 29:177-07. doi:10.1080/00222500590889721 CrossRef
    22. Heath J (1978) Linguistic diffusion in Arnhem Land. Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies, Canberra
    23. Heath J (1981) A case of intensive lexical diffusion: Arnhem Land, Australia. Language 57:335-67 CrossRef
    24. Kandler A (2009) Demography and language competition. Hum Biol 81:181-10 CrossRef
    25. Kandler A, Steele J (2008) Ecological models of language competition. Biol Theory 3:164-73. doi:10.1162/biot.2008.3.2.164 CrossRef
    26. Krauss M (1992) The world’s languages in crisis. Language 68:4-0
    27. May S (2000) Uncommon languages: the challenges and possibilities of minority language rights. J Multiling Multicul 21(5):366-85. doi:10.1080/01434630008666411 CrossRef
    28. McConvell P (2001) Language shift and language spread among hunter-gatherers. In: Panter-Brick C, Rowley-Conwy P, Layton R (eds) Hunter-gatherers: cultural and biological perspectives. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp 143-69
    29. McMahon A, McMahon R (2005) Language classification by numbers. Oxford University Press, Oxford
    30. Mesoudi A, Whiten A, Laland KN (2006) Towards a unified science of cultural evolution. Behav Brain Sci 29:329-83. doi:10.1017/S0140525X06009083
    31. Mitchell BR (1988) British historical statistics. Cambridge University Press, New York
    32. Mufwene S (2008) Language evolution. Continuum, London, New York
    33. Murdoch S (1996) Language politics in Scotland. Aiberdeen Universitie Scots Leid Quorum, Aberdeen
    34. Nasidze I et al (2006) Concomitant replacement of language and mtDNA in South Caspian populations of Iran. Curr Biol 16:668-73. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2006.02.021 CrossRef
    35. Nettle D, Romaine S (2000) Vanishing voices: the extinction of the world’s languages. Oxford University Press, Oxford
    36. Neuhauser C (2001) Mathematical challenges in spatial ecology. Not Am Math Soc 48:1304-314
    37. Okubo A, Maini PK, Williamson MH, Murray JD (1989) On the spatial spread of the grey squirrel in Britain. Proc R Soc B 238: 113-25. doi:10.1098/rspb.1989.0070
    38. Ragan MA, McInerney JO, Lake JA (2009) The network of life: genome beginnings and evolution. Philos Trans R Soc B 364:2169-175. doi:10.1098/rstb.2009.0046
    39. Schleicher A (1863) Die Darwinsche theorie und die sprachwissenschaft: offenes sendschreiben an Herrn Dr. Ernst Haeckel, o. Professor der Zoologie und Direktor des zoologischen Museums an der Universit?t Jena. B?hlau, Weimar, Germany
    40. Sereno M (1991) Four analogies between biological and cultural/linguistic evolution. J Theor Biol 151:467-07. doi:10.1016/S0022-5193(05)80366-2 CrossRef
    41. Sorensen AP (1967) Multilingualism in the northwest Amazon. Am Anthropol 69:670-84 CrossRef
    42. Steele J (2009) Human dispersals: mathematical models and the archaeological record. Hum Biol 81:121-40 CrossRef
    43. Steele J, Jordan P, Cochrane E (2010) Cultural and linguistic diversity: evolutionary approaches. Philos Trans R Soc B
    44. Stone L, Lurquin P (2007) Genes, culture and human evolution. Blackwell, Oxford
    45. Thomason SG (2001) An introduction to language contact. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh
    46. van Wyhe J (2005) The descent of words: evolutionary thinking 1780-880. Endeavour 29:94-00. doi:10.1016/j.endeavour.2005.07.002 CrossRef
    47. Vision of Britain website (2004-008) Historical British censuses. http://vision.edina.ac.uk/census/index.jsp. Accessed 21 September 2009
    48. Withers CWJ (1984) Gaelic in Scotland, 1698-981: the geographical history of a language. John Donald, Edinburgh
    49. Young D, Bettinger R (1992) The Numic spread: a computer simulation. Am Antiq 57:85-9 CrossRef
  • 作者单位:James Steele (1)
    Anne Kandler (1)

    1. AHRC Centre for the Evolution of Cultural Diversity, Institute of Archaeology, University College London, 31-34 Gordon Square, London, WC1H 0PY, UK
文摘
Darwin saw similarities between the evolution of species and the evolution of languages, and it is now widely accepted that similarities between related languages can often be interpreted in terms of a bifurcating descent history (‘phylogenesis-. Such interpretations are supported when the distributions of shared and unshared traits (for example, in terms of etymological roots for elements of basic vocabulary) are analysed using tree-building techniques and found to be well-explained by a phylogenetic model. In this article, we question the demographic assumption which is sometimes made when a tree-building approach has been taken to a set of cultures or languages, namely that the resulting tree is also representative of a bifurcating population history. Using historical census data relating to Gaelic- and English-speaking inhabitants of Sutherland (Highland Scotland), we have explored the dynamics of language death due to language shift, representing the extreme case of lack of congruence between the genetic and the culture–historical processes. Such cases highlight the important role of selective cultural migration (or shifting between branches) in determining the extinction rates of different languages on such trees.

© 2004-2018 中国地质图书馆版权所有 京ICP备05064691号 京公网安备11010802017129号

地址:北京市海淀区学院路29号 邮编:100083

电话:办公室:(+86 10)66554848;文献借阅、咨询服务、科技查新:66554700