Dialects in Animals: Evidence, Development and Potential Functions

Dialects are one of the parallels that have long been established between human language and animal communication. We discuss the potential functional parallels between human and animal dialects, arguing that in both cases different mechanisms and functions may be at stake where large geographical v...

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Main Authors: Laurence Henry, Stéphanie Barbu, Alban Lemasson, Martine Hausberger
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Animal Behavior and Cognition 2015-05-01
Series:Animal Behavior and Cognition
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.animalbehaviorandcognition.org/uploads/journals/6/03.Henry_FINAL.pdf
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spelling doaj-a28445d87c8946038979638f9f6b90802020-11-24T22:40:56ZengAnimal Behavior and CognitionAnimal Behavior and Cognition2372-50522372-43232015-05-012213215510.12966/abc.05.03.2015Dialects in Animals: Evidence, Development and Potential FunctionsLaurence HenryStéphanie BarbuAlban LemassonMartine HausbergerDialects are one of the parallels that have long been established between human language and animal communication. We discuss the potential functional parallels between human and animal dialects, arguing that in both cases different mechanisms and functions may be at stake where large geographical versus very localized (e.g. social) variations are concerned. Birdsong studies in particular, but also recent studies of mammal vocalizations, show that the use of the term “dialect” to refer to within-species vocal variations in animal species is more than a metaphor and that animal dialects offer a possibility to explore the causes and functions of linguistic variation and change, one of the challenges in exploring the origin of diversity of language families. We present here an original view, as our approach was not “primate-centered,” and take into consideration “homoplasy” (analogy) as a potential mechanism to explain that different taxa have evolved the same functional response to social constraints.http://www.animalbehaviorandcognition.org/uploads/journals/6/03.Henry_FINAL.pdfDialectsVocal communicationBirdsMammalsEvolution of communication
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laurence Henry
Stéphanie Barbu
Alban Lemasson
Martine Hausberger
spellingShingle Laurence Henry
Stéphanie Barbu
Alban Lemasson
Martine Hausberger
Dialects in Animals: Evidence, Development and Potential Functions
Animal Behavior and Cognition
Dialects
Vocal communication
Birds
Mammals
Evolution of communication
author_facet Laurence Henry
Stéphanie Barbu
Alban Lemasson
Martine Hausberger
author_sort Laurence Henry
title Dialects in Animals: Evidence, Development and Potential Functions
title_short Dialects in Animals: Evidence, Development and Potential Functions
title_full Dialects in Animals: Evidence, Development and Potential Functions
title_fullStr Dialects in Animals: Evidence, Development and Potential Functions
title_full_unstemmed Dialects in Animals: Evidence, Development and Potential Functions
title_sort dialects in animals: evidence, development and potential functions
publisher Animal Behavior and Cognition
series Animal Behavior and Cognition
issn 2372-5052
2372-4323
publishDate 2015-05-01
description Dialects are one of the parallels that have long been established between human language and animal communication. We discuss the potential functional parallels between human and animal dialects, arguing that in both cases different mechanisms and functions may be at stake where large geographical versus very localized (e.g. social) variations are concerned. Birdsong studies in particular, but also recent studies of mammal vocalizations, show that the use of the term “dialect” to refer to within-species vocal variations in animal species is more than a metaphor and that animal dialects offer a possibility to explore the causes and functions of linguistic variation and change, one of the challenges in exploring the origin of diversity of language families. We present here an original view, as our approach was not “primate-centered,” and take into consideration “homoplasy” (analogy) as a potential mechanism to explain that different taxa have evolved the same functional response to social constraints.
topic Dialects
Vocal communication
Birds
Mammals
Evolution of communication
url http://www.animalbehaviorandcognition.org/uploads/journals/6/03.Henry_FINAL.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT laurencehenry dialectsinanimalsevidencedevelopmentandpotentialfunctions
AT stephaniebarbu dialectsinanimalsevidencedevelopmentandpotentialfunctions
AT albanlemasson dialectsinanimalsevidencedevelopmentandpotentialfunctions
AT martinehausberger dialectsinanimalsevidencedevelopmentandpotentialfunctions
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