Volume issued after the London Conference (1998)

The Evolutionary Emergence of Language:
Social function and the origins of linguistic form
Chris Knight, James R. Hurford and Michael Studdert-Kennedy (eds)
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (in press).
Introduction

- Studdert-Kennedy, Michael, Knight, Chris and Hurford, James R., ‘Introduction – The evolutionary emergence of language: Social function and the origins of linguistic form’
Section I: The evolution of cooperative communication

- Knight, Chris, ‘Introduction – The evolution of cooperative communication’
- Burling, Robbins, ‘Comprehension, production and conventionalization in the origins of language’
- Noble, Jason, ‘Co-operation, competition and the evolution of pre-linguistic communication’
- Dessalles, Jean-Louis, ‘Language and hominid politics’
- Power, Camilla, ‘Secret language use at female initiation: Bounding gossiping communities’
- Knight, Chris, ‘Play as a precursor of phonology and syntax’
Section II: The emergence of phonetic structure

- Studdert-Kennedy, Michael, ‘Introduction – The emergence of phonetic structure’
- Vihman, Marilyn M. & DePaolis, Rory A., ‘The role of mimesis in infant language development: Evidence for phylogeny?’
- MacNeilage, Peter J. & Davis, Barbara L., ‘Evolution of speech: The relation between ontogeny and phylogeny’
- Studdert-Kennedy, Michael, ‘Evolutionary implications of the particulate principle: Imitation and the dissociation of phonetic form from semantic function’
- Boer, Bart de, ‘Emergence of sound systems through self-organisation’
- Livingstone, Daniel & Fyfe, Colin, ‘Modelling language-physiology coevolution’
Section III: The evolution of syntax

- Hurford, James R., ‘The emergence of syntax’
- Lightfoot, David, ‘The spandrels of the linguistic genotype’
- Carstairs-McCarthy, Andrew, ‘The distinction between sentences and noun phrases: An impediment to language evolution?’
- Bickerton, Derek, ‘How protolanguage became language’
- Wray, Alison, ‘Holistic utterances in protolanguage: The link from primates to humans’
- Kirby, Simon, ‘Syntax without natural selection: How compositionality emerges from vocabulary in a population of learners’
- Hurford, James R., ‘Social transmission favours linguistic generalization’
- Worden, Robert P., ‘Words, memes and language evolution’
- Newmeyer, Frederick, J., ‘On the reconstruction of ‘Proto-world’ word order’
Epilogue

- Pagel, Mark, ‘The history, rate and pattern of world linguistic evolution’

The Paris Conference