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Thursday, February 26, 2004
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The current Science has a special issue devoted entirely to language.
It is an interesting collection of articles and essays on the past,
present and future of language. Beginning with the archaeology of
language, researchers in linguistics, archaeology, molecular genetics,
and human ecology explore an explanation for the present-day
distribution of many of the world's languages and language families.
A variety of perspectives are represented including areas such as
anthropology, archaeology, cognitive science, linguistics, evolutionary
biology, neuroscience, and psychology--on the origins, evolution, and
uniqueness of human language. The articles are thoughtful and
provocative.
There are explorations into brain systems in both primates and humans.
Researchers probing into the neurological basis of language are
focusing on seemingly unrelated abilities such as mimicry and movement.
They ask "are we wired for imitation?" Language areas such as Broca's
and Wernicke's overlap brain areas that are critical for imitation and
suggests that there is an evolutionary continuity between action
recognition, imitation, and language. Advances in brain imaging,
neuroscience, and genetics have enabled researchers to go deeper into
our brains and our biological past. For a long time, researchers
treated language ability as some sort of "miracle," but now new
discoveries are unravelling some of the mystery.
The Future of Language
According to David Graddol, "The world's language system is undergoing
rapid change because of demographic trends, new technology, and
international communication." Both written and spoken commuication are
affected. Contrary to what seems to be the current trend, English may
not be the dominant language - it may perhaps be Mandarin. The author
looks at the current languages spoken (the top 4 are Chinese, English,
Hindi/Urdu and Spanish) and he projects that according to population
statistics the top 4 in the year 2025 will be Chinese, Hindi/Urdu,
Arabic and English.
Language in Science
Globalization of scientific English seems to promise greater
international unity. English has become the language of choice for
international meetings, for corporate science, multinational research
programs, and official Web sites.The implications are important and
have both positive and negative aspects. The role of English greatly
increases the possibilities for international commerce in scientific
work, on many levels but the dominance of English can weaken the
relevance of other tongues. Scientists with a limited command of
English may find it more difficult to publish in international journals
and thus to reach a corresponding audience. "Such dominance can yield
the illusion of a communicational tyranny by English and the underdog
psychology that goes with it."
Language and software
Software is described as the "key enabler of the global information
infrastructure" Most of the infrastructure supporting the information
age, however, is not evident or visible to most people."Few people
appreciate the importance of software, until it breaks!"
There needs to be a great deal more research into the amount and extent
of programming languages and software in use in the world today. As the
computer becomes more important in all forms of global exchange, there
needs to be a focus on the language of this communication for security
and increased functionality. The development of these languages may
take various forms, for example, some researchers are exploring more
exotic forms of languages involving speech, gestures, pictures, and
templates. Multimedia is becoming more important but will it become a
dominant feature in programming languages of the future? Clearly, these
new forms of communication with computers are compelling and will
continue to evolve.
Science Volume 303, Number 5662, Issue of 27 Feb 2004, pp. 1316-1319.
Related Links to some of the authors and topics
David Graddol
Lawrence Guy Straus
Constance Holden
Elizabeth Pennisi
11:40:15 PM
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Last update: 3/4/04; 1:05:48 AM.
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