Study in Child Language Deficits Reveals Importance of Voluntary Imagination in Language Evolution

Topic: Anthropology and Disability
Author: Dr. Andrey Vyshedskiy
Published: 2022/07/14 - Updated: 2023/01/04 - Peer-Reviewed: Yes
Contents: Summary - Definition - Introduction - Main Item - Related Topics

Synopsis: A study of language development in children with language deficits highlights the importance of the voluntary imagination component of language. Language evolution is not limited to speech acquisition: an extensive study of language development in children with language deficits highlights the importance of the voluntary imagination component of language. When a sentence cannot be interpreted by recalling an image from memory, we rely on voluntary imagination to construct a novel mental image in our minds.

Introduction

Did the boy bite the cat, or was it the other way around? When processing a sentence with several objects, one has to establish 'who did what to whom. When a sentence cannot be interpreted by recalling an image from memory, we rely on voluntary imagination to construct a novel mental image in our minds.

Main Item

In a previous study, the team of Dr. Andrey Vyshedskiy, a neuroscientist from Boston University, USA, hypothesized that this voluntary imagination ability has fundamental importance for combinatorial language acquisition. To test the hypothesis, the researchers designed a voluntary imagination intervention and administered it to 6,454 children with language deficiencies (age 2 to 12 years).

In that three-year study, published in 2021, the scientists concluded that children, who were engaged with the voluntary imagination intervention, showed 2.2-fold improvement in combinatorial language comprehension compared to children with similar language deficiencies. These findings suggested that language can be improved by training voluntary imagination and confirmed the importance of the visuospatial component of language.

In his latest work, now published in the open-science scholarly journal Research Ideas and Outcomes (RIO), Dr. Vyshedskiy builds on these experimental findings to address the question of language evolution and suggest that evolutionary acquisition of language was driven primarily by improvements of voluntary imagination, rather than the speech apparatus.

Dr. Vyshedskiy explains:

"Chimpanzees and bonobos can learn hundreds of words. However, apes that know the names of objects, colors, and sizes are not capable of identifying 'a large red pencil' among multi-colored, multi-sized pieces of Lego, crayons, and pencils. This suggests that apes cannot mentally integrate color, size and objects together. Thus, voluntary constructive imagination must have been acquired by humans after our ancestors split from chimpanzees 6 million years ago."

"Evolutionary development of voluntary imagination can be traced back through the evolution of stone tools, since the process of hand ax manufacturing - for example - requires voluntary imagination of a future tool."

"Apes do not manufacture stone tools, further confirming their imagination limitations."

"Our ancestors started manufacturing crude Mode One choppers about 3.3 million years ago - the first indication of voluntary imagination ability. Then, two million years ago, the emergence of symmetrical Mode Two hand axes with a long cutting edge indicates a major improvement of both tool design and voluntary imagination. Later, approximately 400,000 years ago, the Neanderthals began manufacturing even better Mode Three tools, demonstrating even better voluntary imagination ability. Finally, about 70,000 years ago, Homo sapiens dramatically extended their tool repertoire as they came up with bows and arrows, needles with eyes, flutes, and composite artworks. This is when most researchers recognize that humanity acquired the modern voluntary imagination ability."

Continued below image.
Chimpanzees use cobbles to break nuts, but they do not modify them. Homo habilis was one of the earliest hominin species that intentionally changed cobbles to manufacture the crude Mode One choppers. Homo habilis could only break out large flakes from a cobble; the voluntary control of its mental template was relatively crude. Homo erectus, on the other hand, could break off much smaller fragments and produce the fine, symmetrical Mode Two hand axes. Therefore, Homo erectus was most likely capable of finer voluntary control of its mental template - Image Credit: Andrey Vyshedskiy.
Chimpanzees use cobbles to break nuts, but they do not modify them. Homo habilis was one of the earliest hominin species that intentionally changed cobbles to manufacture the crude Mode One choppers. Homo habilis could only break out large flakes from a cobble; the voluntary control of its mental template was relatively crude. Homo erectus, on the other hand, could break off much smaller fragments and produce the fine, symmetrical Mode Two hand axes. Therefore, Homo erectus was most likely capable of finer voluntary control of its mental template - Image Credit: Andrey Vyshedskiy.
Continued...

Dr. Vyshedskiy proposes that this step-wise development of voluntary imagination - and not the speech apparatus per se - was the key factor underlying the acquisition of modern combinatorial language.

There are several additional lines of evidence suggesting dissociation of articulate speech and voluntary imagination.

Conclusion

In conclusion, on the basis of children studies, neurological observations, archeological findings, combinatorial sign language invention by Nicaraguan deaf children, and variety of sound boxes in birds, Dr. Vyshedskiy argues that the evolution of hominin speech apparatus must have followed (rather than led to) the improvements in voluntary imagination.

Contrary to the common assumption, it is voluntary imagination rather than speech that appears to define the pace of combinatorial language evolution.

Vyshedskiy A (2022) Language evolution is not limited to speech acquisition: a large study of language development in children with language deficits highlights the importance of the voluntary imagination component of language. Research Ideas and Outcomes 8: e86401.

Attribution/Source(s):

This peer reviewed publication was selected for publishing by the editors of Disabled World due to its significant relevance to the disability community. Originally authored by Dr. Andrey Vyshedskiy, and published on 2022/07/14 (Edit Update: 2023/01/04), the content may have been edited for style, clarity, or brevity. For further details or clarifications, Dr. Andrey Vyshedskiy can be contacted at bu.edu. NOTE: Disabled World does not provide any warranties or endorsements related to this article.

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Cite This Page (APA): Dr. Andrey Vyshedskiy. (2022, July 14 - Last revised: 2023, January 4). Study in Child Language Deficits Reveals Importance of Voluntary Imagination in Language Evolution. Disabled World. Retrieved October 9, 2024 from www.disabled-world.com/disability/education/anthropology/language-evolution.php

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