Research

“For a privileged minority, Western democracy provides the ability to seek behind the veil of distortion and misrepresentation, ideology and class interest”

Noam Chomsky

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The Biological Nature of Human Language

Biolinguistics, 4, 1 Biolinguistics aims to shed light on the specifically biological nature of human language, focusing on five foundational questions:(1) What are the properties of the language phenotype?(2) How does language ability grow and mature in individuals?(3) How is language put to use?(4) How is language implemented in the brain?(5) What evolutionary processes led […]
By Robert C. Berwick, Thomas G. Bever, Cedric Boeckx, Lisa Lai-Shen Cheng, Elly van Gelderen, Heidi Harley, Lyle Jenkins, Anna Maria Di Sciullo, James McGilvray, Massimo Piattelli-Palmarini, Karin Stromswold, Juan Uriagereka, Andrew Wedel, Kenneth Wexler
March 24, 2010

Metrical Combinatorics and the Real Half of the Fibonacci Sequence

Biolinguistics 3 (4), 404-406 Languages with stress group syllables into metrical feet (Halle and Idsardi 1995,Hayes 1995)—non-exhaustive groups of contiguous syllables. The size of feet innatural languages ranges from unary (a single syllable) to unbounded (as manysyllables as possible); in addition syllables can also remain unfooted. Under theseconditions, the number of possible metrical footings for […]
By William J. Idsardi, Juan Uriagereka
December 13, 2009

Homo loquens neanderthalensis? On the symbolic and linguistic capacities of Neandertals

Munibe El reciente análisis de ADN fósil de dos Neandertales procedentes de la Cueva El Sidrón (Asturias) ha revelado que los Neandertales poseían las mutaciones del gen FOXP2 consideradas específicas de los humanos modernos. Dado que FOXP2 está implicado en el desarrollo y uso del lenguaje, tal hallazgo está provocando una revisión de las capacidades […]
By Sergio Balari, Antonio Benítez-Burraco, Victor Longa, Guillermo Lorenzo, Juan Uriagereka
November 10, 2009

Uninterpretable features in syntactic evolution

Of minds and language: A dialogue with Noam Chomsky in the Basque Country As all of you know, every time I listen to a talk by Randy Gallistel, I think I have made a career mistake–I should have studied a different animal. But anyway, in the interests of interdisciplinarity, I will talk about human animals, […]
By Juan Uriagereka
January 29, 2009

Also Sprach Neanderthalis... Or did She?

Biolinguistics 2 (2-3), 225-232 Two Neanderthals from El Sidrón (Asturias, Spain; Rosas et al. 2006) have been recently analyzed by Krause et al.(henceforth K) for possible mutations in FOXP2 (Krause et al. 2007), a gene involved in the faculty of language (Lai et al. 2001). Although these mutations were believed to be specific to modern […]
By Antonio Benítez-Burraco, Victor Longa, Guillermo Lorenzo, Juan Uriagereka
January 1, 2009