Are stories the chicken or the egg?

ALMOR, A., SMITH, D.V., BONILHA, L., FRIDRIKSSON, J., RORDEN, C. (2007). What is in a name? Spatial brain circuits are used to track discourse references. In: «NeuroReport», vol. XVIII, pp. 1215-1219.

ARBIB, M.A. (2001). Co-evolution of human consciousness and language. In: «Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences», vol. CMXXIX, pp. 195-220.

ARBIB, M.A. (2005a). From monkey-like action recognition to human language: An evolutionary framework for neurolinguistics. In: «Behavioral and Brain Sciences», vol. XXVIII, n. 2, pp. 105-124; discussion 125-167.

ARBIB, M.A. (2005b). Interweaving protosign and proto-speech: Further developments beyond the mirror. In: «Interaction Studies: Social Behavior and Communication in Biological and Artificial Systems», vol. VI, n. 2, pp. 145-171.

ARBIB, M.A. (2010). Review of Derek Bickerton’s Adam’s tongue. In: «Language», vol. LXXXVI, n. 2, pp. 431-435.

ARBIB, M.A. (2012). How the brain got language: The mirror system hypothesis, Oxford University Press, Oxford.

ARBIB, M.A. (2013). Five terms in search of a synthesis. In: M.A. ARBIB (ed.), Language, music, and the brain: A mysterious relationship, MIT Press, Cambridge (MA), pp. 3-44.

ARBIB, M.A. (2016). How language evolution reshaped human consciousness. In: R.R. POZNANSKI, J.A. TUSZYNSKI, T.E. FEINBERG (eds.), Biophysics of consciousness: A foundational approach, World Scientific, Singapore/Hackensack (NJ), pp. 87-128.

ARBIB, M.A. (2021). When brains meet buildings: A conversation between neuroscience and architecture, Oxford University Press, Oxford.

ARBIB, M.A. (2024). Pantomime within and beyond the evolution of language. In: P. ZYWICZYNSKI, J. BLOMBERG, M. BORUTA-ŻYWICZYŃSKA (eds.), Perspectives on pantomime, John Benjamins, Amsterdam, pp. 16-57.

ARBIB, M.A. (2025). From the protolanguage spectrum to the underlying bases of language. In: D. ADONE, A. GRAMATKE (eds.), On the evolution, acquisition and development of syntax, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 11-33.

ARBIB, M.A., BICKERTON, D. (eds.) (2010). The emergence of protolanguage: Holophrasis vs compositionality, John Benjamins, Amsterdam.

ARBIB, M.A., D’ERRICO, F., GÄRDENFORS, P, HEINE, B., KUTEVA, T. et alii (2025). Human origins and language origins 2: From symbols via pantomime to language and narrative (to appear).

ARBIB, M.A., FRAGASZY, D.M., HEALY, S.D., STOUT, D. (2023). Tooling and construction: From nut-cracking and stone-tool making to bird nests and language. In: «Current Research in Behavioral Sciences», vol. V, Art. Nr. 100121 - doi: 10.1016/j.crbeha.2023. 100121.

BARHAM, L., EVERETT, D. (2021). Semiotics and the origin of language in the lower palaeolithic. In: «Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory», vol. XXVIII, n. 2, pp. 535-579.

BERWICK, R.C., CHOMSKY, N. (2015). Why only us: Language and evolution, MIT Press, Cambridge (MA).

BICKERTON, D. (2009). Adam’s tongue. How humans made language, how language made humans, Hill & Wang, New York.

BICKERTON, D. (2014). More than nature needs: Language, mind, and evolution, Harvard University Press, Cambridge (MA).

BRUNER, J. S. (1991). The narrative construction of reality. In: «Critical Inquiry», vol. XVIII, n. 1, pp. 1-21.

COMER, C., & TAGGART, A. (2021). Brain, mind, and the narrative imagination, Bloomsbury, London/ NewYork.

CORBALLIS, M.C. (2009). Mental time travel and the shaping of language. In: «Experimental Brain Research», vol. CXCII, n. 3, pp. 553-560.

CORBALLIS, M.C. (2013). Wandering tales: Evolutionary origins of mental time travel and language. In: «Frontiers in Psychology», vol. IV, Art. Nr. 485 - doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00485.

CORBALLIS, M.C. (2019). Language, memory, and mental time travel: An evolutionary perspective. In: «Frontiers in Human Neuroscience», vol. XIII, Art. Nr. 217 - doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2019.00217.

CROSS, I., FITCH, T., ABOITIZ, F., IRIKI, A., JARVIS, E., LEWIS, J., LIEBAL, K., MERKER, B., STOUT, D., TREHUB, S. (2013). Culture and evolution. In: M.A. ARBIB (ed.), Language, music, and the brain: A mysterious relationship, MIT Press, Cambridge (MA), pp. 541-562.

FERRETTI, F. (2025). Stories come first. The origins of human communication from a naturalised perspective of language. In: «Rivista internazionale di Filosofia e Psicologia», vol. XV, n. 1, pp. 1-16.

FERRETTI, F., CHIERA, A., ADORNETTI, I. (2024). Narrative pantomime at the origin of language. In: P. ZYWICZYNSKI, J. BLOMBERG, M. BORUTA-ŻYWICZYŃSKA (eds.), Perspectives on pantomime, John Benjamins, Amsterdam, pp. 78-99.

FITCH, W.T., JARVIS, E.D. (2013). Birdsong and other animal models for human speech, song, and vocal learning. In: M.A. ARBIB (ed.), Language, music and the brain: A mysterious relationship, MIT Press, Cambridge (MA), pp. 499-539.

FOGASSI, L., FERRARI, P.F. (2004). Mirror neurons, gestures and language evolution. In: «Interaction Stud-ies: Social Behavior and Communication in Biological and Artificial Systems», vol. V, n. 3, pp. 345-363.

GALLAGHER, S., HUTTO, D. (2008). Understanding others through primary interaction and narrative prac-tice. In: J. ZLATEV, T. P. RACINE, C. SINHA, E. ITKONEN (eds.), The shared mind: Perspectives on intersubjectivity, John Benjamins, Amsterdam, pp. 17-38.

GÄRDENFORS, P. (2021). Demonstration and pantomime in the evolution of teaching and communication. In: «Language & Communication», vol. LXXX, pp. 71-79.

HURFORD, J.R. (2003). The neural basis of predicate-argument structure. In: «Behavioral and Brain Sciences», vol. XXVI, n. 3, pp. 261-283.

HUTTO, D. (2007). The narrative practice hypothesis: Origins and applications of folk psychology. In: «Royal Institute of Philosophy - Supplement», vol. LX, pp. 43-68.

KIRBY, S. (2000). Syntax without natural selection: How compositionality emerges from vocabulary in a population of learners. In: C. KNIGHT, M. STUDDERT-KENNEDY, J.R. HURFORD (eds.), The evolutionary emergence of language, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, p. 99-119.

LURIA, A.R., VYGOTSKY, L.S. (1992). Ape, primitive man, and child: Essays in the history of behavior, translated by E. ROSSITER, Paul M. Deutsch Press, Orlando/Helsinki/Moscow (Original edition: Etjudy po istorii povedenija. Obezjana. Primitiv. Rebenok, Pedagogika, Moskva 1930).

MACNEILAGE, P.F., DAVIS, B.L. (2005). The frame/content theory of evolution of speech: A comparison with a gestural-origins alternative. In: «Interaction Studies», vol. VI, n. 2, pp. 173-199.

MERKER, B. (2002). Music, the missing Humboldt system. In: «Musicae Scientiae», vol. VI, n. 1, pp. 3-21.

NAGEL, T. (1974). What is it like to be a bat?. In: «The Philosophical Review», vol. LXXXIII, n. 4, pp. 435-450.

PIAGET, J. (1954). The construction of reality in the child, translated by M. COOK, Routledge and Kegan Paul, London (Original edition: La construction du reél chez l'enfant, Delachaux et Nestlé, Neuchãtel 1937).

POLICH, L. (2005). The emergence of the deaf community in Nicaragua: With sign language you can learn so much, Gallaudet University Press, Washington (DC).

PROGOVAC, L. (2016). A gradualist scenario for language evolution: Precise linguistic reconstruction of early human (and Neandertal) grammars. In: «Frontiers in Psychology», vol. VII, Art. Nr. 1714 – doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01714.

SEIFERT, U., VERSCHURE, P. F. M. J., ARBIB, M. A., CO-HEN, A. J., FOGASSI, L., FRITZ, T., KUPERBERG, G., MANZOLLI, J., RICKARD, N. (2013). Semantics of internal and external worlds. In: M.A. ARBIB (ed.), Language, music, and the brain: A mysterious relationship, MIT Press, Cambridge (MA), pp. 203-229.

SEYFARTH, R.M., CHENEY, D.L., MARLER, P. (1980a). Monkey responses to three different alarm calls: Evidence for predator classification and semantic communication. In: «Science», vol. CCX, n. 4471, pp. 801-803.

SEYFARTH, R.M., CHENEY, D.L., MARLER, P. (1980b). Vervet monkey alarm calls: Semantic communication in a free-ranging primate. In: «Animal Behaviour», vol. XXVIII, n. 4, pp. 1070-1094.

SUDDENDORF, T., CORBALLIS, M.C. (2007). The evolution of foresight: What is mental time travel, and is it unique to humans?. In: «Behavioral and Brain Sciences», vol. XXX, n. 3, pp. 299-351.

VON UEXKÜLL, J. (1957). A stroll through the worlds of animals and men: A picture book of invisible worlds. In: C.H. SCHILLER (ed.), Instinctive behavior: The development of a modern concept, translated by C.H. SCHILLER, International Universities Press, New York, pp. 5-80 (Original edition: Streifzüge durch die Umwelten von Tieren und Menschen, Springer, Berlin 1934).

VYGOTSKY, L. (1978). Mind in society: The development of higher psychological processes, edited by V. OLM-STEINER, M. COLE, E. SOUBERMAN, S. SCRIBNER, Harvard University Press, Cambridge (MA).

WRAY, A. (2000). Holistic utterances in protolanguage: The link from primates to humans. In: C. KNIGHT, M. STUDDERT-KENNEDY, J. HURFORD (eds.), The evolutionary emergence of language: Social function and the origins of linguistic form, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 285-302.

WRAY, A. (2005). The explanatory advantages of the holistic protolanguage model: The case of linguistic irregularity. In: «Behavioral and Brain Sciences», vol. XXVIII, n. 2, pp. 147-148.

ZLATEV, J., SIBIERSKA, M., ŻYWICZYŃSKI, P., VAN DE WIJER, J., BORUTA-ŻYWICZYŃSKA, M. (2024). Can pantomime narrate?. In: P. ZYWICZYNSKI, S. WACEWICZ, M. BORUTA-ŻYWICZYŃSKA, J. BLOMBERG (eds.), Perspectives on pantomime, John Benjamins, Amsterdam, pp. 115-138.

Comments (0)

No login
gif