Object structure
Title:

Neurony lustrzane i ewolucja języka

Subtitle:

Teksty Drugie Nr 1-2 (2011)

Creator:

Corballis, Michael C.

Contributor:

Mrozik, Maciej : Tł.

Publisher:

IBL PAN

Place of publishing:

Warszawa

Date issued/created:

2011

Description:

21 cm ; Tekst pol., streszcz. ang.

Type of object:

Czasopismo/Artykuł

Subject and Keywords:

neurony lustrzane ; język ; neurosemiotyka ; ucieleśnione poznanie ; ucieleśnienie w języku

References:

1. M.A. Arbib, From monkey-like action recognition to human language. An evolutionary framework for neurolinguistics, Behavioral and Brain Sciences" 2005a vol. 28, s. 105-168;
2. M.A. Arbib, Interweaving protosign and protospeech. Further developments beyond the mirror, Interaction Studies' 2005b vol. 6, s. 145-171;
3. D.F. Armstrong, S.E. Wilcox, The gestural origin of language, Oxford University Press, Oxford 2007;
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195163483.001.0001
4. D.F. Armstrong, W.C. Stokoe, S.E. Wilcox, Gesture and the nature of language, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 1995;
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511620911
5. L. Aziz-Zadeh, S.M. Wilson, G. Rizzolatti, M. Iacoboni, Congruent embodied representations for visually presented actions and linguistic phrases describing actions, Current Biology" 2006 vol. 16, s. 1818-1823.
6. L. Aziz-Zadeh, M. Iacoboni, E. Zaidel, Wilson, S.I. Mazziotta, Left hemisphere motor facilitation in response to manual action sounds, European Journal of Neuroscience" 2004 vol. 19, s. 2609-2612.
7. L. Aziz-Zadeh, Koski, L., Zaidel, E.I. Mazziotta, M. Iacoboni, Lateralization of the human mirror system, Journal of Neuroscience" 2006 vol. 36, s. 2964-2970.
8. S. Baron-Cohen, Mindblindness, MIT Press Cambridge, MA 1995.
9. L.W. Barsalou, Grounded cognition, Annual Review of Psychology" 2008 vol. 59, s. 617-645.
10. E. Bates, F. Dick, Language, gesture, and the developing brain, Developmental Psychobiology" 2002 vol. 40, s. 293-310.
11. E. Bates, L.S. Snyder, The cognitive hypothesis in language development, w: Infant performance and experience, ed. E. Ina, C. Uzgiris, E.J. McVicker Hunt, University of Illinois Press, Urbana, IL 1987, s. 168-204.
12. R.H. Bauer, Lateralization of neural control for vocalization by the frog (Rana pipiens), Psychobiology" 1993 vol. 31, s. 243-248.
13. P. Bernardis, A. Bello, P. Pettenati, S. Stefanini, M. Gentilucci, Manual actions affect vocalizations of infants, Experimental Brain Research" 2008 vol. 184, s. 599-603.
14. D. Bickerton Language and human behavior, University of Washington Press, Seattle, WA 1995, s. 69.
15. F. Binkofski, G. Buccino, Motor functions of the Broca's region, Brain and Language" 2004 vol. 89, s. 362-389.
16. P. Bloom, Can a dog learn a word?, Science" 2004 no 304, s. 1605-1606.
17. S.E. Blumstein, E. Baker, H. Goodglass, H. Phonological factors in auditory comprehension in aphasia, Neuropsychologia" 1977 vol. 15, s. 19-30.
18. L.J. Boë, L.-J, Heim, K. Honda, S. Maeda, The potential neandertal vowel space was as large as that of modern humans, Journal of Phonetics" 2002 vol. 30, s. 465-484;
19. P. Broca, Remarques sur le siège de la faculté de la parole articulée, suivies d'une observation d'aphémie (perte de parole), Bulletin de la Société d'Anatomie" (Paris) 1861 no 36, s. 330-357.
20. C.P. Browman, L.F. Goldstein, Dynamics and articulatory phonology, w: Mind as motion, ed. T. van Gelder, R.F. Port, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA 1995, s. 175-193.
21. R.L. Buckner, J.R. Andrews-Hanna, D.L. Schacter, The brain's default network. Anatomy, function, and relevance to disease, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences" 2008, s. 1124, s. 1-38.
22. R. Burling, The talking ape, Oxford University Press, New York 2005;
23. R. Burling, Motivation, conventionalization, and arbitrariness in the origin of language, w: The origins of language. What human primates can tell us, ed. B.J. King, School of American Research Press, Santa Fe, NM 1999.
24. G.A. Calvert, R. Campbell, Reading speech from still and moving faces. The neural substrates of visible speech, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience" 2003 vol. 15, s. 57-70.
25. J.-Y. Chen, Do Chinese and English speakers think about time differently? Failure of replicating Boroditsky (2001), Cognition" 2007 vol. 104, s. 427-436.
26. D.L. Cheney, R.M. Seyfarth, Constraints and preadaptations in the earliest stages of language evolution, The Linguistic Review" 2005 vol. 32, s. 135-159;
27. N. Chomsky, Syntactic structures, Mouton, The Hague 1957, tegoż Reflections on language, Pantheon 1975.
28. N. Chomsky. Reflections on language.
29. M.H. Christiansen, N. Chater, Language as shaped by the brain, Behavioral and Brain Sciences" 2008 vol. 31, s. 489-558;
30. M.H. Christiansen, S. Kirby, Language evolution. The hardest problem in science? w: Language evolution, s. 15.
31. E.B. de Condillac (1746) An essay on the origin of human knowledge, trans. T. Nugent, Scholars Facsimiles and Reprints, Gainesville (FL)1971;
32. G. Coop, K. Bullaughey, F. Luca, M. Przeworski, The timing of selection of the human FOXP2 gene. Molecular Biology, Evolution" 2008 vol. 35, s. 1257-1259.
33. M. Corbalis, Mirror neurons and the evolution of language, Brain and Language" 2010 no 112, s. 25-35.
34. M.C. Corballis, From mouth to hand. Gesture, speech, and the evolution of right-handedness, Behavioral and Brain Sciences" 2003 vol. 36, s. 198-208.
35. M.C. Corballis, From hand to mouth. The origins of language, Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ 2002;
36. M.C. Corballis, The origins of modernity. Was autonomous speech the critical factor?, Psychological Review" 2004b vol. 111, s. 522-543;
37. M.C. Corballis, The lopsided ape, Oxford University Press, New York 1991;
38. M.C. Corballis, FOXP2 and the mirror system, Trends in Cognitive Sciences" 2004a vol. 8, s. 95-96.
39. M.C. Corballis, T. Suddendorf, Memory, time, and language, w: What makes us human, ed. C. Pasternak, Oneworld Publications, Oxford, UK 2007, s. 17-36.
40. F. de Saussure Cours de linguistique générale, ed. C. Bally, A. Sechehaye, collab. A. Riedlinger, Payot, Lausanne–Paris 1916.
41. T.W. Deacon, The symbolic species. The co-evolution of language and the brain, W.W. Norton, New York 1997.
42. J. Decety, J. Grezes, N. Costes, D. Perani, M. Jeannerod, E. Procyk i in., Brain activity during observation of actions. Influence of action content and subject's strategy, Brain" 1997 vol. 120, s. 1763-1777.
43. D. DeGusta, W.H. Gilbert, S.P. Turner, Hypoglossal canal size and hominid speech, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences" (USA) 1999 vol. 96, s. 1800-1804.
44. M. Donald, Origins of the modern mind, Harvard University Press, Cambridge,MA 1991.
45. G. Ehert, Left-hemispheric advantage in the mouse brain for recognizing ultrasonic communication calls, Nature" 1987 vol. 325, s. 249-251.
46. K. Emmorey, Language, cognition, and brain. Insights from sign language research, Erlbaum, Hillsdale, NJ 2002; C. Neidle, J. Kegl, D. MacLaughlin, B. Bahan, R.G. Lee The syntax of American sign language, The MIT Press, Cambridge, MA 2000.
47. W. Enard, M. Przeworski, S.E. Fisher, C.S.L. Lai, V. Wiebe, T. Kitano i in., Molecular evolution of FOXP2, a gene involved in speech and language, Nature 2002" vol. 418, s. 869-871. 48. P.D. Evans, N. Mekel-Bobrov, E.J. Yallender, R.R. Hudson, B.T. Lahn, Evidence that the adaptive allele of the brain size gene microcephalin introgressed into Homo sapiens from an archaic Homo lineage, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences" (USA) 2006 vol. 103, s. 18178-18183.
49. D.L. Everett, Cultural constraints on grammar and cognition in Pirahã, Current Anthropology" 2005 vol. 46, s. 621-646;
50. D.L. Everett, Cultural constraints on grammar in Pirahã. A reply to Nevins, Pesetsky, and Rodrigues (2007), http://ling.auf.net/lingBuzz/000427 2007;
51. D.L. Everett, Cultural constraints on grammar and cognition in Pirahã.
52. L. Fadiga, L. Fogassi, G. Pavesi, G. Rizzolatti, Motor facilitation during action observation. A magnetic stimulation study, „Journal of Neurophysiology” 1995 vol. 73, s. 2608-2611.
53. G. Fauconnier Mental, spaces, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA 1985, R.W. Langacker Theoretical prerequisites,Foundations of cognitive grammarvol. 1, Stanford University Press, Stanford, CA 1987.
54. S. Fecteau, M. Lassonde, H. Théoret, Modulation of motor cortex excitability during action observation in disconnected hemisphere, „Neuroreport” 2005 vol. 16, s. 1591-1594.
55. P.F. Ferrari, E. Visalberghi, A. Paukner, L. Fogassi, A. Ruggiero, S.J. Suomi, Neonatal imitation in rhesus macaques, „PloS Biology” 2006 no 4, s. 1501-1508.
56. P.F. Ferrari, V. Gallese, G. Rizzolatti, L. Fogassi, Mirror neurons responding to the observation of ingestive and communicative mouth actions in the monkey ventral premotor cortex, „European Journal of Neuroscience” 2003 vol. 17, s. 1703-1704.
57. L. Fogassi, P.F. Ferrari, Mirror neurons and the evolution of embodied language, „Current Directions in Psychological Science” 2007 vol. 16, s. 136-141;
58. N. Frishberg, Arbitrariness and iconicity in American sign language, „Language” 1975 vol. 51, s. 696-719.
59. B. Galantucci, C.A. Fowler, M.T. Turvey, The motor theory of speech perception reviewed, „Psychonomic Bulletin Review” 2006 no 13, s. 361.
60. P. Gärdenfors, Cooperation and the evolution of symbolic communication, w: Evolution of communication systems, ed. D.K. Oller, U. Griebel, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA 2004, s. 243.
61. R.A. Gardner, B.T. Gardner, Teaching sign language to a chimpanzee, „Science” 1969 no 165, s. 664-672.
62. M. Gentilucci, M.C. Corballis, From manual gesture to speech. A gradual transition, „Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews” 2006 vol. 30, s. 949-960.
63. M. Gentilucci, F. Benuzzi, M. Gangitano, S. Grimaldi, Grasp with hand and mouth. A kinematic study on healthy subjects, „Journal of Neurophysiology” 2001 vol. 86, s. 1685-1699.
64. R.W. Gibbs, Jr., Embodiment and cognitive science, Cambridge University Press, New York 2006, G. Rizzolatti, C. Sinigaglia Mirrors in the brain.
65. K.R. Gibson, S. Jessee, Language evolution and expansions of multiple neurological processing areas, w: The origins of language. What nonhuman primates can tell us, ed. B.J. King, School of American Research Press, Santa Fe, NM 1999, s. 189-227.
66. S. Goldin-Meadow, D. McNeill, The role of gesture and mimetic representation in making language the province of speech, w: The descent of mind, ed. M.C. Corballis, S.E.G. Lea, Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK 1999, s. 155-172;
67. S. Goldin-Meadow, D. McNeill, J. Singleton Silence is liberating. Removing the handcuffs on grammatical expression and speech, „Psychological Review” 1996 vol. 103, s. 34-55.
68. L. Goldstein, D. Byrd, E. Saltzman, The role of vocal tract gestural action units in understanding the evolution of phonology, w: Action to language via the mirror neuron system, ed. M.A. Arbib, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK 2006, s. 215-249.
69. E. Green, D.H. Howes, The nature of conduction aphasia. A study of anatomic and clinical features and of underlying mechanisms, w: Studies in neurolinguistics, ed. A. Whitaker, H.A. Whitaker, Academic Press, San Diego 1978.
70. Y. Grodzinsky, The language faculty, Broca’s region, and the mirror system, „Cortex” 2006 vol. 42, s. 464-468.
71. M. Groszer, D.A. Keays, R.M.J. Deacon, J.P. de Bono, S. Prasad-Mulcare, S. Gaube et al. Impaired synaptic plasticity and motor learning in mice with a point mutation implicated in human speech deficits, „Current Biology” 2008 vol. 18, s. 354-362.
72. F.H. Guenther, Cortical interactions underlying the production of speech sounds, „Journal of Communication Disorders” 2006 vol. 39, s. 350-365.
73. S. Haesler, C. Rochefort, B. Georgi, P. Licznerski, P. Osten, C. Scharff, Incomplete and inaccurate vocal imitation after knockdown of FoxP2 in songbird basal ganglia nucleus area X, „PLoS Biology” 2007 vol. 5, s. 2885-2897.
74. The hands are the head of the mouth. The mouth as articulator in sign language, ed. R. Sutton-Spence, P. Boyes-Braem, Signum-Verlag, Hamburg 2001.
75. C. Hayes, The ape in our house, Gollancz, London 1952.
76. B. Heine, T. Kuteva, The genesis of grammar, Oxford University Press, Oxford 2007;
77. G.W. Hewes, Primate communication and the gestural origins of language, „Current Anthropology” 1973 vol. 14, s. 5-24;
78. G. Hickok, Eight problems for mirror neuron theory of action understanding in monkeys and humans, „Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience” 2009 vol. 21 no. 7, s. 1229-1243
79. G. Hickok, D. Poeppel, The cortical organization of speech processing, „Nature Reviews Neuroscience” 2007 vol. 8, s. 393-402.
80. G. Hickok, D. Poeppel, Dorsal and ventral streams. A framework for understanding aspects of the function neuroanatomy of language, „Cognition” 2004 vol. 92, s. 67-99; G. Hickok, D. Poeppel Towards a functional neuroanatomy of speech perception, „Trends in Cognitive Neurosciences” 2000 vol. 4, s. 131-138.
81. G. Hickok, B. Buchsbaum, C. Humphries, T. Muftuler, Auditory-motor interaction revealed by fMRI. Speech, music, and working memory in area Spt, „Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience” 2003 vol. 15, s. 673-682;
82. G. Hickok, D. Poeppel, Towards a functional neuroanatomy of speech perception, M. Vigneau, V. Beaucousin, P.Y. Hervé, H. Duffau, F. Crivello, O. Houdé i in. Meta-analyzing left-hemisphere language areas. Phonology, semantics, and sentence processing, „Neuroimage” 2006 vol. 30, s. 1414-1432.
83. C. Hockett, In search of love’s brow, „American Speech” 1978 vol. 53, s. 243-315, s. 274-275.
84. M.A. Hook-Costigan, L.J. Rogers, Lateralized use of the mouth in production of vocalization by marmosets. „Neuropsychologia” 1998 vol. 36, s. 1265-1273.
85. P.J. Hopper, E.C. Traugott Grammaticalization, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK 1993.
86. J. Horne Tooke, Epea pteroenta or the diversions of Purley, London 1857.
87. B. Horwitz, K. Amunts, R. Bhattacharyya, D. Patkin, K. Jeffries, K. Zilles i in., Activation of Broca’s area during the production of spoken and signed language. A combined cytoarchitectonic mapping and PET analysis, „Neuropsychologia” 2003 vol. 41, s. 1868-1876.
88. The human revolution. Behavioral and biological perspectives on the origins of modern humans, ed. P.A. Mellars, C.B. Stringer, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh 1989.
89. J.R. Hurford, Language beyond our grasp. What mirror neurons can, and cannot, do for language evolution, w: Evolution of communication systems. A comparative approach, ed. D.K. Oller, U.Griebel, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA 2004, s. 297-313.
90. J.R. Hurford, The language mosaic and its evolution, w: Language evolution, ed. M.H. Christiansen, S. Kirby, Oxford University Press, Oxford 2003, s. 38-57.
91. M. Iacoboni, J.C. Mazziotta, Mirror neuron system. Basic findings and clinical applications, „Annals of Neurology” 2007 vol. 62, s. 213-218.
92. M. Iacoboni, S.M. Wilson, Beyond a single area. Motor control and language within a neural architecture encompassing Broca’s area, „Cortex” 2006 vol. 42, s. 503-506, s. 504.
93. J.M. Iverson, S. Goldin-Meadow, Gesture paves the way for language development, „Psychological Science” 2005 vol. 16, s. 367-371
94. E.D. Jarvis, Selection for and against vocal learning in birds and mammals, „Ornithological Science” 2006 vol. 5, s. 5-14.
95. U. Jürgens, Neural pathways underlying vocal control, „Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews” 2002 vol. 36, s. 235-238.
96. J. Kaminsky, J. Call, J. Fischer, Word learning in a domestic dog. Evidence for „fast mapping”, „Science” 2004 no 304, s. 1682-1683.
97. R.F. Kay, M. Cartmill, M. Barlow, The hypoglossal canal and the origin of human vocal behavior, „Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences” (USA) 1998 vol. 95, s. 5417-5419.
98. A. Kendon, Sign languages of aboriginal Australia, Cambridge University Press, Melbourne 1988.
99. M. Kingsley, Travels in West Africa, Congo Française, Corisco and Cameroons (1897), F. Cass, London 1965, s. 504.
100. E. Kohler, C. Keysers, M.A. Umilta, L. Fogassi, V. Gallese, G. Rizzolatti, Hearing sounds, understanding actions. Action representation in mirror neurons, „Science” 2002 vol. 297, s. 846-848.
101. J. Krause, C. Lalueza-Fox, L. Orlando, W. Enard, R.E. Green, H.A. Burbano i in., The derived FOXP2 variant of modern humans was shared with Neanderthals, „Current Biology” 2007 vol. 17, s. 1908-1912.
102. M. Kumashiro, H. Ishibashi, Y. Uchiyama, S. Itakura, A. Murata, A. Iriki, Natural imitation induced by joint attention in Japanese macaques, „International Journal of Psychophysiology” 2003 vol. 50, s. 81-99.
103. G. Lakoff, M. Johnson, Metaphors we live by, University of Chicago Press, Chicago 1980. Wydanie polskie: Metafory w naszym życiu, przeł. T.P. Krzeszowski, PIW, Warszawa 1988.
104. R.W. Langacker, Descriptive application, Foundations of cognitive grammarvol. 2, Stanford University Press, Stanford, CA 1991.
105. A.M. Liberman, F.S. Cooper, D.P. Shankweiler, M. Studdert-Kennedy, Perception of the speech code, „Psychological Review” 1967 vol 74, s. 431-461.
106. A.M. Liberman, I.G. Mattingly, The motor theory of speech perception revised, „Cognition” 1985 vol. 31, s. 1-36.
107. K. Liebal, J. Call, M. Tomasello, Use of gesture sequences in chimpanzees, „American Journal of Primatology” 2004 vol. 64, s. 377-396.
108. D.E. Lieberman Sphenoid, shortening and the evolution of modern cranial shape, „Nature” 1998 no 393, s. 158-162;
109. P. Lieberman, Eve spoke. Human language and human evolution, W.W. Norton, New York 1998.
110. P. Lieberman, The evolution of human speech, „Current Anthropology” 2007 vol. 48, s. 39.
111. P. Lieberman, E.S. Crelin, D.H. Klatt, Phonetic ability and related anatomy of the new-born, adult human, Neanderthal man, and the chimpanzee, „American Anthropologist” 1972 vol. 74, s. 287-307.
112. D.E. Lieberman, B.M McBratney, G. Krovitz, The evolution and development of cranial form in Homo sapiens, „Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences” (USA) 2002 vol. 99, s. 1134-1139.
113. F. Liégeois, T. Baldeweg, A. Connelly, D.G. Gadian, M. Mishkin, F. Vargha-Khadem, Language fMRI abnormalities associated with FOXP2 gene mutation, „Nature Neuroscience” 2003 vol. 6, s. 1230-1237.
114. J.-W. Lin, Time in a language without tense. The case of Chinese, „Journal of Semantics” 2005 vol. 33, s. 1-53.
115. R. Lindenberg, H. Fangerau, R.J. Seitz, „Broca’s area” as a collective term?, „Brain and Language” 2007 vol. 102, s. 22-29.
116. A.J. Lotto, G.S. Hickok, L.L. Holt, Reflections on mirror neurons and speech perception, „Trends in Cognitive Sciences” 2009 vol. 13, s. 110-114.
117. A. MacLarnon, G. Hewitt, Increased breathing control. Another factor in the evolution of human language, „Evolutionary Anthropology” 2004 vol. 13, s. 181-197.
118. P.F. MacNeilage, The origin of speech.
119. P.F. MacNeilage, The origin of speech, Oxford University Press, Oxford 2008.`
120. G. Mallery, A collection of gesture-signs and signals of North American Indians with some comparisons, Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 1880.
121. N. Masataka, Why early linguistic milestones are delayed in children with Williams syndrome. Late onset of hand banging as a possible rate-limiting constraint on the emergence of canonical babbling, „Developmental Science” 2001 vol. 4, s. 158-164.
122. H. McGurk, J. MacDonald Hearing lips and seeing voices, „Nature” 1976 vol. 364, s. 746-748.
123. D. McNeill, Hand and mind. What gestures reveal about thought, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, IL 1992;
124. P.A. Mellars, Neanderthals and the modern human colonization of Europe, „Nature” 2004 vol. 432, s. 461-465.
125. U. Neisser, Memory with a grain of salt, w: Memory. An anthology, ed. H.H. Wood, A.S. Byatt, Chatto and Windus, London, 2008, s. 88.
126. A. Nevins, D. Pesetsky, C. Rodrigues, Pirahã exceptionality. A reassessment, http://ling.auf.net/lingBuzz/000411 2007.
127. N. Nishitani, R. Hari, Temporal dynamics of cortical representation for action, „Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences” (USA) 2000 vol. 97, s. 913-918.
128. N. Nishitani, R. Hari, Viewing lip forms. Cortical dynamics, „Neuron” 2002 vol. 36, s. 1211-1220, G. Rizzolatti, I. Craighero The mirror-neuron system, „Annual Review of Neuroscience” 2004 vol. 27, s. 169-192.
129. M.A. Nowak, N.L. Komorova, P. Niyogi, Computational and evolutionary aspects of language, „Nature” 2002 vol. 417, s. 611-617.
130. M.A. Nowak, J.B. Plotkin, V.A.A. Jansen, The evolution of syntactic communication, „Nature” 2000 no 404, s. 495-498.
131. L.M. Oberman, E.M. Hubbard, J.P. McCleery, E.L. Altschuler, V.S. Ramachandran, J.A. Pineda, EEG evidence for mirror neuron dysfunction in autism spectrum disorders, „Cognitive Brain Research” 2005 vol. 24, s. 190-198.
132. M. Petrides, G. Cadoret, S. Mackey, Orofacial somatomotor responses in the macaque monkey homologue of Broca’s area, „Nature” 2005 no 435, s. 1325-1328.
133. P. Pietrandrea, Iconicity and arbitrariness in Italian sign language, „Sign Language Studies” 2002 vol. 3, s. 296-321.
134. S. Pika, K. Liebal, M. Tomasello, Gestural communication in young gorillas (Gorilla gorilla). Gestural repertoire, and use, „American Journal of Primatology” 2003 vol. 60, s. 95-111.
135. S. Pika, K. Liebal, M. Tomasello, Gestural communication in subadult bonobos (Pan paniscus). Repertoire and use, „American Journal of Primatology” 2005 vol. 65, s. 39-61.
136. S. Pinker The stuff of thought, Penguin Books, London 2007.
137. E. Pizutto, V. Volterra, Iconicity and transparency in sign languages. A cross-linguistic cross-cultural view, w: The signs of language revisited. An anthology to honor Ursula Bellugi and Edward Klima, ed. K. Emmorey, H. Lane, Lawrence Erlbaum, Mahwah (NJ) 2000, s. 261-286.
138. A.S. Pollick, F.B.M. de Waal, Apes gestures and language evolution, „Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences” 2007 vol. 104, s. 8184-8189.
139. A. Puce, D. Perrett, Electrophysiology and brain imaging of biological motion, „Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London” 2003 vol.
140. F. Pulvermüller, M. Huss, F. Kheri, F.M.P. de Martin, O. Hauk, Y. Shtyrov, Motor cortex maps articulatory features of speech sounds, „Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences” 2006 vol. 103, s. 7865-7870;
141. V.S. Ramachandran, Mirror Neurons and imitation learning as the driving force behind „the great leap forward” in human evolution, „Edge” 2000 vol. 69 no 29.
142. G. Rizzolatti, L. Fogassi, V. Gallese, Neurophysiological mechanisms underlying the understanding and imitation of action, „Nature Reviews” 2001 no 2, s. 661-670.
143. G. Rizzolatti, C. Sinigaglia, Mirrors in the brain. How our minds share actions and emotions (2006), Oxford University Press, Oxford 2008.
144. G. Rizzolatti, M.A. Arbib, Language within our grasp;
145. G. Rizzolatti, R. Camardi, L. Fogassi, M. Gentilucci, G. Luppino, M. Matelli, Functional organization of inferior area 6 in the macaque monkey,II,Area F5 and the control of distal movements, „Experimental Brain Research” 1988 vol. 71, s. 491-507.
146. S. Savage-Rumbaugh, S.G. Shanker, T.J. Taylor, Apes, language, and the human mind, Oxford University Press, New York 1998.
147. D.L. Schacter, D.R. Addis, R.L. Buckner, Episodic simulation of future events, „Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences” 2008, s. 1124, s. 39-60.
148. K. Sekiyama, S. Miyauchi, T. Imaruoka, H. Egusa, T. Tashiro, Body image as a visuomotor transformation device revealed in adaptation to reversed vision, „Nature” 2000 no. 407, s. 374-377.
149. A. Senghas, S. Kita, A. Ozyürek, Children creating core properties of language. Evidence from an emerging sign language in Nicaragua, „Science” 2004 vol. 305, s. 1780-1782.
150. A.M. Smith, Protolanguage reconstructed, „Interaction Studies” 2008 vol. 9, s. 100-116.
151. M. Studdert-Kennedy, The particulate origins of language generativity. From syllable to gesture. w: Approaches to the evolution of language, ed. J.R. Hurford, M. Studdert--Kennedy, C. Knight, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK 1998, s. 169-176.
152. T. Suddendorf, M.C. Corballis, Mental time travel and the evolution of the human mind, „Genetic, Social, and General Psychology Monographs” 1997 vol. 123, s. 133-167;
153. T. Suddendorf, M.C. Corballis, The evolution of foresight. What is mental time travel, and is it unique to humans?, „Behavioral and Brain Sciences” 2007 vol. 30, s. 299-351.
154. E. Thelen, G. Schöner, C. Scheier, L.B. Smith, The dynamics of embodiment. A field theory of infant perseverative reaching, „Behavioral and Brain Sciences” 2001 vol. 24, s. 1-86.
155. M. Tomasello, Constructing a language. A usage-based theory of language acquisition, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA 2003.
156. M. Tomasello Constructing a language.The transition to language, ed. A. Wray, Oxford University Press, Oxford 2002.
157. M. Tomasello, Introduction. Some surprises for psychologists, w: New psychology of language. Cognitive and functional approaches to language structure, ed. M. Tomasello, Lawrence Erlbaum, Mahwah, NJ 2003, s. 1-14.
158. E. Visalberghi, D. Fragaszy, Do monkeys ape?w: „Language” and intelligence in monkeys and apes, ed. S.T. Parker, K.R. Gibson, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge1990, s. 247-273.
159. E. Visalberghi, D. Fragaszy, „Do monkeys ape?” Ten years after, w: Imitation in animals and artifacts, ed. K. Dautenhahn, C. Nehaniv, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA 2002, s. 471-499.
160. E. Vleck, Etude comparative onto-phylogénétique de l’enfant du Pech-deL’Azé par rapport à d’autres enfants néanderthaliens, w: L’enfant Pech-de-L’Azé, ed. D. Feremback, Masson, Paris 1970, s. 149-186.
161. K.E. Watkins, A.P. Strafella, T. Paus, Seeing and hearing speech excites the motor system involved in speech production, „Neuropsychologia” 2003 vol. 41, s. 989-994.
162. K.E. Watkins, N.F. Dronkers, F. Vargha-Khadem, Behavioural analysis of an inherited speech and language disorder. Comparison with acquired aphasia, „Brain” 2002 vol. 125, 452-464.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awf058
163. R.M. Willems, P. Hagoort, Neural evidence for the interplay between language, gesture, and action. A review, „Brain and Language” 2007 vol. 101, s. 278-289.
164. S.M. Wilson, A.P. Saygin, M.I. Sereno, M. Iacoboni, Listening to speech activates motor areas involved in speech production, „Nature Neuroscience” 2004 vol. 7, s. 701-702.
165. W.M. Wundt, Elements of folk psychology, Macmillan, New York 1921.

Relation:

Teksty Drugie

Issue:

1-2

Start page:

151

End page:

182

Resource type:

Tekst

Detailed Resource Type:

Artykuł naukowy oryginalny

Format:

application/pdf

Resource Identifier:

0867-0633

Source:

IBL PAN, sygn. P.I.2524 ; click here to follow the link

Language:

pol

Language of abstract:

eng

Rights:

Prawa zastrzeżone - dostęp ograniczony

Terms of use:

Zasób chroniony prawem autorskim. Korzystanie dozwolone wyłącznie na terminalach Instytutu Badań Literackich PAN w zakresie określonym przez przepisy o dozwolonym użytku.

Digitizing institution:

Instytut Badań Literackich Polskiej Akademii Nauk

Original in:

Biblioteka Instytutu Badań Literackich Polskiej Akademii Nauk

Projects co-financed by:

Program Operacyjny Innowacyjna Gospodarka, lata 2010-2014, Priorytet 2. Infrastruktura strefy B + R ; Unia Europejska. Europejski Fundusz Rozwoju Regionalnego

Access:

Zamknięty

This publication is protected by copyright. Access to its digital version is possible on computer terminals in the institution that shares it.
×

Citation

Citation style: