A global analysis of matches and mismatches between human genetic and linguistic histories

Author:

Barbieri Chiara123ORCID,Blasi Damián E.345ORCID,Arango-Isaza Epifanía12ORCID,Sotiropoulos Alexandros G.6ORCID,Hammarström Harald7ORCID,Wichmann Søren8ORCID,Greenhill Simon J.39ORCID,Gray Russell D.3ORCID,Forkel Robert3ORCID,Bickel Balthasar210ORCID,Shimizu Kentaro K.1211ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies, University of Zurich, Zurich 8057, Switzerland

2. Center for the Interdisciplinary Study of Language Evolution, University of Zurich, Zurich 8050, Switzerland

3. Department of Linguistic and Cultural Evolution, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig 04103, Germany

4. Department of Human Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02134

5. Human Relations Area Files, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06511-1225

6. Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of Zurich, Zurich 8008, Switzerland

7. Department of Linguistics and Philology, University of Uppsala, Uppsala 75126, Sweden

8. Cluster of Excellence ROOTS, Kiel University, Kiel 24118, Germany

9. School of Biological Sciences, University of Auckland, Auckland 1010, New Zealand

10. Department of Comparative Language Science, University of Zurich, Zurich 8050, Switzerland

11. Kihara Institute for Biological Research, Yokohama City University, 244-0813, Yokohama, Japan

Abstract

Human history is written in both our genes and our languages. The extent to which our biological and linguistic histories are congruent has been the subject of considerable debate, with clear examples of both matches and mismatches. To disentangle the patterns of demographic and cultural transmission, we need a global systematic assessment of matches and mismatches. Here, we assemble a genomic database (GeLaTo, or Genes and Languages Together) specifically curated to investigate genetic and linguistic diversity worldwide. We find that most populations in GeLaTo that speak languages of the same language family (i.e., that descend from the same ancestor language) are also genetically highly similar. However, we also identify nearly 20% mismatches in populations genetically close to linguistically unrelated groups. These mismatches, which occur within the time depth of known linguistic relatedness up to about 10,000 y, are scattered around the world, suggesting that they are a regular outcome in human history. Most mismatches result from populations shifting to the language of a neighboring population that is genetically different because of independent demographic histories. In line with the regularity of such shifts, we find that only half of the language families in GeLaTo are genetically more cohesive than expected under spatial autocorrelations. Moreover, the genetic and linguistic divergence times of population pairs match only rarely, with Indo-European standing out as the family with most matches in our sample. Together, our database and findings pave the way for systematically disentangling demographic and cultural history and for quantifying processes of shifts in language and social identities on a global scale.

Funder

URPP Evolution in Action

NCCR Evolving Language, SNSF

Sinergia Project "Out of Asia", SNSF

MEXT Japan Kakenhi

the international collaboration program of Nankai University, China.

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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