2020
DOI: 10.1075/elt.00021.ple
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Construction grammar for monkeys?

Abstract: In recent years, multiple researchers working on the evolution of language have put forward the idea that the theoretical framework of usage-based approaches and Construction Grammar is highly suitable for modelling the emergence of human language from pre-linguistic or proto-linguistic communication systems. This also raises the question of whether usage-based and constructionist approaches can be integrated with the analysis of animal communication systems. In this paper, we review possible avenues where usa… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 161 publications
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“…These processes have wide-ranging implications for usage-based research on language evolution (Pleyer & Hartmann 2020), language learning (Pickering and Garrod, 2005;Schmid, 2016), language change (Hilpert, 2017;Neels, 2020b), and the conventionalisation of entrenched units in (proto)linguistic communities (Hartmann & Pleyer, in press).…”
Section: Micro-entrenchment Local-level Routinisation and Schematisamentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…These processes have wide-ranging implications for usage-based research on language evolution (Pleyer & Hartmann 2020), language learning (Pickering and Garrod, 2005;Schmid, 2016), language change (Hilpert, 2017;Neels, 2020b), and the conventionalisation of entrenched units in (proto)linguistic communities (Hartmann & Pleyer, in press).…”
Section: Micro-entrenchment Local-level Routinisation and Schematisamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The former type of interactants then increasingly and gradually moved towards the modern language pole of the continuum by incrementally adding more abstract generalisations. While doing so, they still retained a significant number of specific constructions such as fixed and semi-fixed multiword expressions, idioms, prefabricated chunks as well as low-level schemas, which still characterise a significant part of modern languages today (Stefanowitsch and Flach, 2017;Pleyer & Hartmann 2020) What follows from this perspective is that at the same point in time, there were interactants with protolinguistic/linguistic systems that were similar and overlapped in terms of their token and surface production, but that differed in the underlying cognitive mechanisms of how these surface tokens were produced and interpreted and that differed in the degree of abstraction at which these surface tokens were represented.…”
Section: Language Evolution and The Entrenchment And Conventionalizatmentioning
confidence: 99%