Evolutionary dynamics in the dispersal of sign languages

Author:

Power Justin M.1ORCID,Grimm Guido W.2ORCID,List Johann-Mattis3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Linguistics, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA

2. Independent researcher, Orléans, France

3. Department of Linguistic and Cultural Evolution, Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Jena, Germany

Abstract

The evolution of spoken languages has been studied since the mid-nineteenth century using traditional historical comparative methods and, more recently, computational phylogenetic methods. By contrast, evolutionary processes resulting in the diversity of contemporary sign languages (SLs) have received much less attention, and scholars have been largely unsuccessful in grouping SLs into monophyletic language families using traditional methods. To date, no published studies have attempted to use language data to infer relationships among SLs on a large scale. Here, we report the results of a phylogenetic analysis of 40 contemporary and 36 historical SL manual alphabets coded for morphological similarity. Our results support grouping SLs in the sample into six main European lineages, with three larger groups of Austrian, British and French origin, as well as three smaller groups centring around Russian, Spanish and Swedish. The British and Swedish lineages support current knowledge of relationships among SLs based on extra-linguistic historical sources. With respect to other lineages, our results diverge from current hypotheses by indicating (i) independent evolution of Austrian, French and Spanish from Spanish sources; (ii) an internal Danish subgroup within the Austrian lineage; and (iii) evolution of Russian from Austrian sources.

Funder

H2020 European Research Council

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference72 articles.

1. Sign Languages in Village Communities

2. Truffaut B. 1993 Etienne de Fay and the history of the deaf. In Looking back: a reader on the history of Deaf communities and their sign languages (eds R Fischer H Lane) pp. 13–24. Hamburg Germany: Signum.

3. Winzer MA. 1993 Education urbanization and the deaf community: a case study of Toronto 1870–1900. In Deaf history unveiled: interpretations from the new scholarship (ed. JV Van Cleve) pp. 127–145. Washington DC: Gallaudet University Press.

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