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The Evolution of Communication

Part of the A Bradford book series
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The current wave of research activity on the evolution of cognition is rooted, both historically and intellectually, in the question of how human language evolved.

But scientific progress on this question has been stalled in a debate about whether the question can even be broached.

Breaking this deadlock, "The Evolution of Communication" addresses the problems of how communication systems, including language, have been designed over the course of evolution."The Evolution of Communication" looks at species in their natural environments as a way to begin to understand what the real units of analysis of communicating systems are, using arguments about design and function to illuminate both the origin and subsequent evolution of each system.The book is broadly integrative, synthesizing conceptual issues and empirical results from neurobiology, cognitive and developmental psychology, linguistics, evolutionary biology, ethology, and anthropology.

It covers a diverse group of organisms, including insects, frogs, birds, bats, monkeys and humans, dissecting the unique design features of each species' communication system.Hauser places comparative communication into the structure of Tinbergen's four causal questions (with some modification) in an examination of communication and neurobiological design, ontogenetic design, adaptive design and psychological design.

For each major topic he works through a small set of cases that elegantly and comprehensively illustrate a particular process.

The empirical work is restricted to natural communicating systems that use auditory, visual or audiovisual signals.

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Product Details
Bradford Books
0262581558 / 9780262581554
Paperback / softback
591.59
21/08/1997
United States
English
776p. : ill.
23 cm
postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More
Reprint. Originally published: 1996.