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What animals can tell us about attentional prerequisites of language acquisition

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posted on 2023-08-04, 08:46 authored by David A Leavens, Mahmoud M Elsherif, Hannah Clark

Theories of human language acquisition frequently posit human-unique attentional specializations to jumpstart language acquisition. There is a broad consensus that the developmental processes supporting language acquisition in our species rely on human-unique cognitive adaptions pertaining to the deployment and understanding of attention. However, close attention to the empirical evidence held to support these hypothetical psychological processes, reveals significant gaps between the nature of the evidence provided and these conclusions. In ape-human comparisons, species is confounded with a myriad of lurking variables. We explore these confounds and their implications for models of human language acquisition that appeal to human-unique attentional adaptions, revealing a large theoretical space wherein the phenomena of attention deployment and understanding can coalesce under particular environmental regimes.

History

Author affiliation

School of Psychology and Vision Science, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Language & Communication

Volume

92

Pagination

55 - 73

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

0271-5309

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2023-08-04

Notes

CC-BY on the publisher site

Language

en

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