Iconicity can ground the creation of vocal symbols.

Bibliographic Collection: 
APE
Publication Type: Journal Article
Authors: Perlman, Marcus; Dale, Rick; Lupyan, Gary
Year of Publication: 2015
Journal: R Soc Open Sci
Volume: 2
Issue: 8
Pagination: 150152
Date Published: 2015 Aug
Publication Language: eng
ISSN: 2054-5703
Abstract:

Studies of gestural communication systems find that they originate from spontaneously created iconic gestures. Yet, we know little about how people create vocal communication systems, and many have suggested that vocalizations do not afford iconicity beyond trivial instances of onomatopoeia. It is unknown whether people can generate vocal communication systems through a process of iconic creation similar to gestural systems. Here, we examine the creation and development of a rudimentary vocal symbol system in a laboratory setting. Pairs of participants generated novel vocalizations for 18 different meanings in an iterative 'vocal' charades communication game. The communicators quickly converged on stable vocalizations, and naive listeners could correctly infer their meanings in subsequent playback experiments. People's ability to guess the meanings of these novel vocalizations was predicted by how close the vocalization was to an iconic 'meaning template' we derived from the production data. These results strongly suggest that the meaningfulness of these vocalizations derived from iconicity. Our findings illuminate a mechanism by which iconicity can ground the creation of vocal symbols, analogous to the function of iconicity in gestural communication systems.

DOI: 10.1098/rsos.150152
Alternate Journal: R Soc Open Sci