Publication: The evolutionary origins of syntax: Event cognition in nonhuman primates
The evolutionary origins of syntax: Event cognition in nonhuman primates
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Wilson, V. A. D., Zuberbühler, K., & Bickel, B. (2022). The evolutionary origins of syntax: Event cognition in nonhuman primates. Science Advances, 8(25), abn8464. https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abn8464
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Languages tend to encode events from the perspective of agents, placing them first and in simpler forms than patients. This agent bias is mirrored by cognition: Agents are more quickly recognized than patients and generally attract more attention. This leads to the hypothesis that key aspects of language structure are fundamentally rooted in a cognition that decomposes events into agents, actions, and patients, privileging agents. Although this type of event representation is almost certainly universal across languages, it remains unc
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Wilson, V. A. D., Zuberbühler, K., & Bickel, B. (2022). The evolutionary origins of syntax: Event cognition in nonhuman primates. Science Advances, 8(25), abn8464. https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abn8464