基因组研究表明,我们语言能力的出现可以追溯到13.5万年前。
Genomic study: our capacity for language emerged at least 135k years ago

原始链接: https://phys.org/news/2025-03-genomic-capacity-language-emerged-years.html

一项新的基因组数据分析研究表明,人类语言能力至少出现在13万年前,可能在10万年前左右开始用于社会交流。包括麻省理工学院的宫川茂在内的研究人员认为,由于所有人类语言都可能相关,因此区域人口差异的时间为我们提供了线索。通过检查涵盖遗传Y染色体、线粒体DNA和全基因组的15项遗传学研究,研究小组发现证据表明,区域分支大约始于13万年前。 宫川茂认为,复杂语言的认知能力,包括其词汇和句法组合,早于其作为交流系统的使用。他推测,这种认知能力促进了象征性思维的发展,考古发现例如大约10万年前出现的具有意义的标记和赭石的使用就证明了这一点。虽然承认其他理论认为语言的发展是随着其他进步逐步进行的,但宫川茂强调了这种基因组方法在理解人类语言进化方面的经验基础。

一项基因组学研究表明,人类语言能力至少在135,000年前就出现了,这一结论基于基因分裂的最新可能时间。Hacker News上的评论者们讨论了这一发现的意义和局限性。一些人推测可以识别出哪些特定的基因变化能够为人工智能发展提供信息,而另一些人则建议探索乔姆斯基和伯威克关于语言进化的研究成果。 人们对语言发展完全基于基因的假设表示怀疑,质疑早期语言能力的可能性。一些人认为抽象思维和语言是不可分割的,它们与将人类与动物区分开来的“创造事件”联系在一起。另一些人则认为语言的发展可能发生过多次。普遍的共识反映了确定语言确切起源的复杂性以及围绕人类特殊性的持续争论,强调了在语言出现过程中考虑遗传和环境因素的重要性。

原文

It is a deep question, from deep in our history: when did human language as we know it emerge? A new survey of genomic evidence suggests our unique language capacity was present at least 135,000 years ago. Subsequently, language might have entered social use 100,000 years ago.

Our species, Homo sapiens, is about 230,000 years old. Estimates of when language originated vary widely, based on different forms of evidence, from fossils to cultural artifacts. The authors of the new analysis took a different approach. They reasoned that since all human languages likely have a —as the researchers strongly think—the key question is how far back in time regional groups began spreading around the world.

"The logic is very simple," says Shigeru Miyagawa, an MIT professor and co-author of a new paper summarizing the results.

"Every population branching across the globe has human language, and all languages are related."

Based on what the indicate about the geographic divergence of early human populations, he adds, "I think we can say with a fair amount of certainty that the first split occurred about 135,000 years ago, so human language capacity must have been present by then, or before."

The paper, "Linguistic capacity was present in the Homo sapiens population 135 thousand years ago," appears in Frontiers in Psychology.

Co-authors include Rob DeSalle, a principal investigator at the American Museum of Natural History's Institute for Comparative Genomics, and Ian Tattersall, curator emeritus of human origins at the American Museum of Natural History, and others.

The new paper examines 15 genetic studies of different varieties, published over the past 18 years: three used data about the inherited Y chromosome, three examined mitochondrial DNA, and nine were whole-genome studies.

All told, the data from these studies suggest an initial regional branching of humans about 135,000 years ago. That is, after the emergence of Homo sapiens, groups of people subsequently moved apart geographically, and some resulting genetic variations have developed, over time, among the different regional subpopulations.

The amount of genetic variation shown in the studies allows researchers to estimate the point in time at which Homo sapiens was still one regionally undivided group.

Miyagawa says the studies collectively provide increasingly converging evidence about when these geographic splits started taking place.

The first survey of this type was performed by other scholars in 2017, but they had fewer existing genetic studies to draw upon. Now, there are much more published data available, which, when considered together, points to 135,000 years ago as the likely time of the first split.

The new meta-analysis was possible because "quantity-wise we have more studies, and quality-wise, it's a narrower window [of time]," says Miyagawa, who also holds an appointment at the University of São Paulo.

Like many linguists, Miyagawa believes all human languages are demonstrably related to each other, something he has examined in his own work. For instance, in his 2010 book, "Why Agree? Why Move?" he analyzed previously unexplored similarities between English, Japanese, and some of the Bantu languages. There are more than 7,000 identified human languages around the globe.

Some scholars have proposed that language capacity dates back a couple of million years, based on the physiological characteristics of other primates. But to Miyagawa, the question is not when primates could utter certain sounds; it is when humans had the cognitive ability to develop language as we know it, combining vocabulary and grammar into a system generating an infinite amount of rules-based expression.

"Human language is qualitatively different because there are two things, words and syntax, working together to create this very complex system," Miyagawa says. "No other animal has a parallel structure in their communication system. And that gives us the ability to generate very sophisticated thoughts and to communicate them to others."

This conception of human language origins also holds that humans had the cognitive capacity for language for some period of time before we constructed our first languages.

"Language is both a cognitive system and a communication system," Miyagawa says. "My guess is prior to 135,000 years ago, it did start out as a private cognitive system, but relatively quickly that turned into a communications system."

So, how can we know when distinctively human language was first used? The archaeological record is invaluable in this regard. Roughly 100,000 years ago, the evidence shows, there was a widespread appearance of symbolic activity, from meaningful markings on objects to the use of fire to produce ocher, a decorative red color.

Like our complex, highly generative language, these symbolic activities are engaged in by people, and no other creatures. As the paper notes, "behaviors compatible with language and the consistent exercise of symbolic thinking are detectable only in the archaeological record of H. sapiens."

Among the co-authors, Tattersall has most prominently propounded the view that language served as a kind of ignition for symbolic thinking and other organized activities.

"Language was the trigger for modern human behavior," Miyagawa says. "Somehow, it stimulated human thinking and helped create these kinds of behaviors. If we are right, people were learning from each other [due to language] and encouraging innovations of the types we saw 100,000 years ago."

To be sure, as the authors acknowledge in the paper, other scholars believe there was a more incremental and broad-based development of new activities around 100,000 years ago, involving materials, tools, and social coordination, with language playing a role in this, but not necessarily being the central force.

For his part, Miyagawa recognizes that there is considerable room for further progress in this area of research, but thinks efforts like the current paper are at least steps toward filling out a more detailed picture of language's emergence.

"Our approach is very empirically based, grounded in the latest genetic understanding of early Homo sapiens," Miyagawa says. "I think we are on a good research arc, and I hope this will encourage people to look more at human language and evolution."

More information: Shigeru Miyagawa et al, Linguistic capacity was present in the Homo sapiens population 135 thousand years ago, Frontiers in Psychology (2025). DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1503900

This story is republished courtesy of MIT News (web.mit.edu/newsoffice/), a popular site that covers news about MIT research, innovation and teaching.

Citation: Genomic study indicates our capacity for language emerged 135,000 years ago (2025, March 14) retrieved 17 March 2025 from https://phys.org/news/2025-03-genomic-capacity-language-emerged-years.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

联系我们 contact @ memedata.com