4.6 Editorial Material

Reconstructing prehistoric languages

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2020.0187

Keywords

prehistoric languages; language reconstruction; genetic changes; cognitive innovations; behavioural changes; culture

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This theme issue delves into the study of prehistoric languages, outlining their structural and functional features and exploring the correlation between language features and changes in brain organization during prehistory. It provides a deeper and richer understanding of human prehistory and prehistoric languages.
This theme issue builds on the surge of interest in the field of language evolution as part of the broader field of human evolution, gathering some of the field's most prominent experts in order to achieve a deeper, richer understanding of human prehistory and the nature of prehistoric languages. Taken together, the contributions to this issue begin to outline a profile of the structural and functional features of prehistoric languages, including the type of sounds, the nature of the earliest grammars, the characteristics of the earliest vocabularies and some preferred uses, like conversation and insult. By also correlating certain specific features of language with the changes in brain organization during prehistory, the contributions to this issue directly engage the genetic and the neuroscientific aspects of human evolution and cognition. This article is part of the theme issue 'Reconstructing prehistoric languages'.

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