
Contents
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Overview on Vocal Flexibility in Development and Evolution Overview on Vocal Flexibility in Development and Evolution
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Prelude Prelude
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Definitions of Signal Flexibility and Functional Flexibility Definitions of Signal Flexibility and Functional Flexibility
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The Proposal in Short The Proposal in Short
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Naturally Logical Interpretation of the First Steps of Infant Vocal Development Naturally Logical Interpretation of the First Steps of Infant Vocal Development
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Natural Logic and the Ordering of Stages in Development and Evolution Natural Logic and the Ordering of Stages in Development and Evolution
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Stages in Emergence of Vocal Contextual Flexibility in Human Infancy Stages in Emergence of Vocal Contextual Flexibility in Human Infancy
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The Stages of Vocal Development and Their Naturally Logical Basis The Stages of Vocal Development and Their Naturally Logical Basis
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Infraphonological Stage 1 (The Phonation Stage): Spontaneous Production of Phonatory Acts Infraphonological Stage 1 (The Phonation Stage): Spontaneous Production of Phonatory Acts
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Infraphonological Stage 2 (The Primitive Articulation Stage): Elaboration of Spontaneously Produced Vocalizations to Include Primitive Articulation Infraphonological Stage 2 (The Primitive Articulation Stage): Elaboration of Spontaneously Produced Vocalizations to Include Primitive Articulation
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Infraphonological Stage 3 (The Expansion Stage): Primitive Vocal Category Formation from Vocal Raw Material Infraphonological Stage 3 (The Expansion Stage): Primitive Vocal Category Formation from Vocal Raw Material
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Infraphonological Stage 4 (The Canonical Stage): Emergence of Canonical Syllables Infraphonological Stage 4 (The Canonical Stage): Emergence of Canonical Syllables
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Early Infrasemiotic Development: Emergence of Free Expessivity Early Infrasemiotic Development: Emergence of Free Expessivity
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Summary on Points of Natural Logic in Early Infant Vocal Development Summary on Points of Natural Logic in Early Infant Vocal Development
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Features of Natural Logic as an Interpretive Framework Features of Natural Logic as an Interpretive Framework
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Interleaving Development of Naturally Logical Capabilities Interleaving Development of Naturally Logical Capabilities
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The Natural Logic Alternative to Preformationism: An Analogy to Illustrate Interleaving The Natural Logic Alternative to Preformationism: An Analogy to Illustrate Interleaving
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Naturally Logical Diversity in Evolution and Development Naturally Logical Diversity in Evolution and Development
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Natural Logic and Neurological/Physiological Foundations for Language Natural Logic and Neurological/Physiological Foundations for Language
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Genetic and Epigenetic Changes and Naturally Logical Stages Genetic and Epigenetic Changes and Naturally Logical Stages
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Natural Logic in Other Domains of Child Development Natural Logic in Other Domains of Child Development
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Orderly Sequences in Language Development that Have Already Come to Be Viewed as Corresponding to Evolutionary Sequences Orderly Sequences in Language Development that Have Already Come to Be Viewed as Corresponding to Evolutionary Sequences
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Simple Concatenative Syntax Precedes More Advanced Grammar Simple Concatenative Syntax Precedes More Advanced Grammar
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Words Precede Simple Syntax Words Precede Simple Syntax
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Canonical Babbling Precedes Large-Scale Vocabulary Canonical Babbling Precedes Large-Scale Vocabulary
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The Need for an Explicit Enterprise to Develop Natural Logic as an Explanatory Framework The Need for an Explicit Enterprise to Develop Natural Logic as an Explanatory Framework
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Acknowledgments Acknowledgments
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References References
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7. Contextual Flexibility in Infant Vocal Development and the Earliest Steps in the Evolution of Language
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Published:August 2008
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Abstract
This chapter claims that developmental evidence may be critical in determining the steps of evolution which led to vocal language, concentrating on the appearance of vocal contextual flexibility in the first months of life. It presents a summary of stages of human vocal development and the natural logic that seems to predispose their orderly occurrence. The chapter shows that the developmental patterns in humans in the second and third years of life meet the patterns which would be expected based on the idea that the protolanguage-to-full-fledged-language sequence is required by natural logic. The chapter proposes that interleaving of word and (analytical) multiword stages must have occurred in the evolution of human language.
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