Award Abstract # 0902114
Dynamics of Hunter-Gatherer Language Change

NSF Org: BCS
Division of Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences
Recipient: YALE UNIV
Initial Amendment Date: November 6, 2008
Latest Amendment Date: June 11, 2009
Award Number: 0902114
Award Instrument: Standard Grant
Program Manager: Joan Maling
BCS
 Division of Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences
SBE
 Directorate for Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences
Start Date: November 1, 2008
End Date: February 28, 2014 (Estimated)
Total Intended Award Amount: $718,183.00
Total Awarded Amount to Date: $718,183.00
Funds Obligated to Date: FY 2008 = $718,183.00
History of Investigator:
  • Claire Bowern (Principal Investigator)
    claire.bowern@yale.edu
  • Jane Hill (Co-Principal Investigator)
  • Keith Hunley (Co-Principal Investigator)
  • Patience Epps (Co-Principal Investigator)
Recipient Sponsored Research Office: Yale University
150 MUNSON ST
NEW HAVEN
CT  US  06511-3572
(203)785-4689
Sponsor Congressional District: 03
Primary Place of Performance: Yale University
150 MUNSON ST
NEW HAVEN
CT  US  06511-3572
Primary Place of Performance
Congressional District:
03
Unique Entity Identifier (UEI): FL6GV84CKN57
Parent UEI: FL6GV84CKN57
NSF Program(s): HSD - AGENTS OF CHANGE,
HSD - DYNAMICS OF HUMAN BEHAVI
Primary Program Source: 01000809DB NSF RESEARCH & RELATED ACTIVIT
Program Reference Code(s): 0000, OTHR
Program Element Code(s): 731800, 731900
Award Agency Code: 4900
Fund Agency Code: 4900
Assistance Listing Number(s): 47.075

ABSTRACT

For the vast majority of human history, people all over the world have lived in small social groups as hunters and gatherers, and not in towns or villages. Agriculture has been claimed to be the driving force for recent population expansions: in the strongest claims, almost all current language families ultimately have their pre-industrial distribution because of agricultural expansion. While the spread of farming and languages associated with it has claimed a lot of recent attention, there has been very little corresponding work on the languages of hunter-gatherers. It is important for our overall understanding of social dynamics to analyze what drives change and spread among hunter-gatherers and determine whether such processes are different from what occurred after the farming revolution, 10,000 years ago. Researchers from the US, Canada, New Zealand and Australia will collaborate on work comparing hunter-gatherer groups on three continents (North America, South America, and Australia). In North and South America, some hunter-gatherer languages have spread over large distances, but farming and associated languages have also spread widely, and in some cases farmers reverted to foraging. In Australia, the transition to farming never took place but one language family spread very widely. Results from genetics, linguistics, anthropology and archaeology will be combined to clarify what the relative contributions of migration and language shift were to language spreads. Among the linguistic data to be collected are vocabulary in the fields of plants and animals, and kinship and social organization.

PUBLICATIONS PRODUCED AS A RESULT OF THIS RESEARCH

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(Showing: 1 - 10 of 18)
Bowern, Claire "Out of Africa? The Logic of Phoneme Inventories and Phoneme Effects" Linguistic Typology , 2011
Bowern, Claire and Zentz, Jason "Numeral Systems in Australian languages" Anthropological Linguistics , 2012
Brown, Cecil H., Charles R. Clement, Patience Epps, Eike Luedeling, and Søren Wichmann. "'The Paleobiolinguistics of Domesticated Manioc (Manihot esculenta)'." Ethnobiology Letters , 2014
Claire Bowern "Relatedness as a Factor in Language Contact" Journal of Language Contact , 2014
Claire Bowern and Jason Zentz "Diversity in the numeral systems of Australian hunter-gatherers." Anthropological Linguistics , 2012
Claire Bowern, Hannah Haynie, and Hannah LaPalombara "Sound Symbolism in the Languages of Australia" PLoS One , v.10 , 2014 , p.10.1371/j 10.1371/journal.pone.0092852
Claire Bowern, Patience Epps, Russell Gray, Jane Hill, Keith Hunley, Patrick McConvell and Jason Zentz "Does lateral transmission obscure inheritance in hunter- gatherer languages?" PLoS One , 2011
Epps, Patience "?Inheritance, calquing, or independent innovation? Reconstructing morphological complexity in Amazonian numerals'." Journal of Language Contact , 2014
Epps, Patience and Andrés Salanova. "As linguad da Amazonia" LIAMES , v.12 , 2013 , p.7-38
Epps, Patience and Bowern, Claire and Hansen, Cynthia and Hill, Jane and Zentz, Jason "On numeral complexity in hunter-gatherer languages" Linguistic Typology , 2012
Gavin, Michael C. and Botero, Carlos A. and Bowern, Claire and Colwell, Robert K. and Dunn, Michael and Dunn, Robert R. and Gray, Russell D. and Kirby, Kathryn R. and {McCarter}, Joe and Powell, Adam and Rangel, Thiago F. and Stepp, John R. and Trautwein, "Toward a Mechanistic Understanding of Linguistic Diversity" {BioScience} , v.63 , 2013 , p.524--535 10.1525/bio.2013.63.7.6
(Showing: 1 - 10 of 18)

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