In 1985, the linguist Charles Hockett proposed that the use of teeth and jaws as tools in hunter-gatherer populations makes consonants produced with lower lip and upper teeth (“f” and “v” sounds) hard to produce. He thus conjectured that these sounds were a recent innovation in human language. Blasi et al. combined paleoanthropology, speech sciences, historical linguistics, and methods from evolutionary biology to provide evidence for a Neolithic global change in the sound systems of the world's languages. Spoken languages have thus been shaped by changes in the human bite configuration owing to changes in dietary and behavioral practices since the Neolithic.
%0 Journal Article
%1 blasi2019human
%A Blasi, D E
%A Moran, Steven
%A Moisik, S R
%A Widmer, P
%A Dediu, D
%A Bickel, B
%D 2019
%I American Association for the Advancement of Science
%J Science
%K archaeology linguistics pos-neolithic sounds
%N 1192
%T Human sound systems are shaped by post-Neolithic changes in bite configuration ...
%U https://dx.doi.org/10.5167/uzh-169552
%V 363
%X In 1985, the linguist Charles Hockett proposed that the use of teeth and jaws as tools in hunter-gatherer populations makes consonants produced with lower lip and upper teeth (“f” and “v” sounds) hard to produce. He thus conjectured that these sounds were a recent innovation in human language. Blasi et al. combined paleoanthropology, speech sciences, historical linguistics, and methods from evolutionary biology to provide evidence for a Neolithic global change in the sound systems of the world's languages. Spoken languages have thus been shaped by changes in the human bite configuration owing to changes in dietary and behavioral practices since the Neolithic.
@article{blasi2019human,
abstract = {In 1985, the linguist Charles Hockett proposed that the use of teeth and jaws as tools in hunter-gatherer populations makes consonants produced with lower lip and upper teeth (“f” and “v” sounds) hard to produce. He thus conjectured that these sounds were a recent innovation in human language. Blasi et al. combined paleoanthropology, speech sciences, historical linguistics, and methods from evolutionary biology to provide evidence for a Neolithic global change in the sound systems of the world's languages. Spoken languages have thus been shaped by changes in the human bite configuration owing to changes in dietary and behavioral practices since the Neolithic.},
added-at = {2023-09-04T16:07:44.000+0200},
author = {Blasi, D E and Moran, Steven and Moisik, S R and Widmer, P and Dediu, D and Bickel, B},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2cc1be25af63c32dd147e5e92cbc406b1/tabularii},
interhash = {ec4b10efcb9c5e729ef83fe28b63455a},
intrahash = {cc1be25af63c32dd147e5e92cbc406b1},
issn = {0036-8075},
journal = { Science},
keywords = {archaeology linguistics pos-neolithic sounds},
number = 1192,
publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science},
timestamp = {2023-09-04T16:08:27.000+0200},
title = {Human sound systems are shaped by post-Neolithic changes in bite configuration ...},
url = {https://dx.doi.org/10.5167/uzh-169552},
volume = 363,
year = 2019
}