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Phonetic Ability and Related Anatomy of the Newborn and Adult Human, Neanderthal Man, and the Chimpanzee
400
Citations
33
References
1972
Year
Speech SciencesLanguage EvolutionLanguage DevelopmentSpeech ArticulationSpeech ScienceComparative AnatomyPrimate SystematicsLanguage ProductionPhonologyPhoneticsRelated AnatomyPrimate BehaviorLanguage StudiesAcoustic AnalysisHealth SciencesNeanderthal ManAdult Homo SapiensSpeech ProductionSpeech EncodingSpeech AcousticHuman EvolutionSpeech CommunicationLanguage PerceptionPhonetic AbilitySpeech AcousticsSpeech ProcessingEvolutionary AnatomyNewborn Homo SapiensSpeech PerceptionLinguistics
The sounds of human speech make human language a rapid medium of communication through a process of speech “encoding.” The presence of sounds like the vowels [a], [i], and [u] makes this process possible. The supralaryngeal vocal tracts of newborn Homo sapiens and chimpanzee are similar and resemble the reconstructed vocal tract of the fossil La Chapelle‐aux‐Saints Neanderthal man. Vocal tract area functions that were directed toward making best possible approximations to the human vowels [a], [i], and [u], as well as certain consonantal configurations, were modeled by means of a computer program. The lack of these vowels in the phonetic repertories of these creatures, who lack a supralaryngeal pharyngeal region like that of adult Homo sapiens, may be concomitant with the absence of speech encoding and a consequently linguistic ability inferior to modern man.
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