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Rethinking where language comes from

11.20.25 | Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics

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A new Science paper challenges the idea that language stems from a single evolutionary root. Instead, it proposes that our ability to communicate evolved through the interaction of biology and culture, and involves multiple capacities, each with different evolutionary histories. The framework unites discoveries across disciplines to explain how the ability to learn to speak, develop grammar, and share meaning converged to create complex communication.

For centuries, philosophers and scientists have wrestled with understanding how human language came about. Language defines us as a species, yet its origins have remained a mystery. In a remarkable international collaboration, ten experts from different disciplines present a unified framework to address this enduring puzzle, harnessing powerful new methods and insights from their respective scientific domains.

“Crucially, our goal was not to come up with our own particular explanation of language evolution,” says first author Inbal Arnon, “Instead, we wanted to show how multifaceted and biocultural perspectives, combined with newly emerging sources of data, can shed new light on old questions.”

Expanding horizons

The authors stress that in the search for language origins, no single explanation is enough. Rather, language arose when different biological abilities - like the capacity to reproduce novel sounds, recognize patterns, and cooperate socially - converged with cultural processes of transmitting knowledge between individuals (both within and across generations).

“The multifaceted nature of language can make it difficult to study, but also expands horizons for understanding its evolutionary origins,” says co-author Simon Fisher. “Rather than looking for that one special thing that singles humans out, we can identify different facets involved in language, and productively study them not just in our own species but also in non-human animals from different branches of the evolutionary tree.”

Importantly, the team highlights how progress has stalled when disciplines worked in isolation from one another. To move forward, they advocate an approach that integrates learning, culture, and biology, drawing on fields as diverse as linguistics, psychology, animal communication, neuroscience and genetics. As one of humanity’s most distinctive traits, language remains a story of connection: between biology and culture, between different scientific fields, and between people themselves.


Three case studies in focus

To demonstrate the power of this framework, the researchers look at three facets whose role in language emergence becomes clearer through a biocultural lens:

Biocultural perspectives on language evolution illuminate unique and shared features of the emergence of complex communication, and also pave the way for innovative research on language learning, artificial intelligence, and how communication breaks down in disorders.

The research paper titled “What enables human language? A biocultural framework” will be available in Science after the embargo lifts and can then be accessed at http://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adq8303 . More information, including a copy of the paper, can also be found at https://www.eurekalert.org/press/scipak/ .

Science

10.1126/science.adq8303

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What enables human language? A biocultural framework

20-Nov-2025

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Anniek Corporaal
Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
anniek.corporaal@mpi.nl

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How to Cite This Article

APA:
Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics. (2025, November 20). Rethinking where language comes from. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LPEN6308/rethinking-where-language-comes-from.html
MLA:
"Rethinking where language comes from." Brightsurf News, Nov. 20 2025, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LPEN6308/rethinking-where-language-comes-from.html.