| 2005 | - | The Major Transitions in the Evolution of Language - Zuidema |
:: | 2 |
| | STUDDERT-KENNEDY, M. (2000). Evolutionary implications of the particulate principle: Imitation and the dissociation of phonetic form from semantic function. In: Knight et al. (2000).
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| 2003 | - | Launching language: The gestural origin of discrete infinity - Studdert-Kennedy,Goldstein |
:: | 5 |
| | Studdert-Kennedy, M. (2000), `Evolutionary implications of the particulate principle: Imitation and the dissociation of phonetic form from semantic function', in C. Knight, et al., 161-176.
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| 2003 | - | Competitive Exclusion and Coexistence of Universal Grammars - Mitchener,Nowak |
:: | 5 |
| | Studdert-Kennedy, M. (2000). Evolutionary implications of the particulate principle: Imitation and the dissociation of phonetic form from semantic function, in The Evolutionary Emergence of Language: Social Function and the Origins of Linguistic Form, C. Knight, J. R. Hurford and M. Studdert-Kennedy (Eds), Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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| 2003 | - | A Mathematical Model of Human Languages: The Interaction of Game Dynamics and Learning Processes - Mitchener |
:: | 2 |
| | [71] M. Studdert-Kennedy. Evolutionary implications of the particulate principle: Imitation and the dissociation of phonetic form from semantic function. In C. Knight, J. R. Hurford, and M. Studdert-Kennedy, editors, The Evolutionary Emergence of Language: Social Function and the Origins of Linguistic Form. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2000.
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| 2003 | - | Language Evolution: Consensus and Controversies - Christiansen,Kirby |
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| | 33 Studdert-Kennedy, M. (2000) Evolutionary implications of the particulate principle: imitation and the dissociation of phonetic form from semantic function. In The Evolutionary Emergence of Language (Knight, C., Studdert-Kennedy, M. and Hurford, J.R., eds) pp. 161 -176, Cambridge University Press
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| 2002 | - | Did language evolve like the vertebrate eye? - Botha |
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| | Studdert-Kennedy, M., 2000. Evolutionary implications of the particulate principle: Imitation and the dissociation of phonetic form from semantic function. In: Knight, C., Studdert-Kennedy, M., Hurford, J.R. (Eds.), The Evolutionary Emergence of Language. Social Function and the Origins of Linguistic Form. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 161-176.
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