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Optionality in animal communication: a novel framework for examining the evolution of arbitrariness
Author(s) -
Watson Stuart K.,
Filippi Piera,
Gasparri Luca,
Falk Nikola,
Tamer Nicole,
Widmer Paul,
Manser Marta,
Glock HansJohann
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
biological reviews
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.993
H-Index - 165
eISSN - 1469-185X
pISSN - 1464-7931
DOI - 10.1111/brv.12882
Subject(s) - arbitrariness , relevance (law) , cognitive science , function (biology) , perception , process (computing) , similarity (geometry) , signal (programming language) , computer science , cognitive psychology , psychology , linguistics , artificial intelligence , biology , evolutionary biology , philosophy , neuroscience , political science , law , image (mathematics) , programming language , operating system
ABSTRACT A critical feature of language is that the form of words need not bear any perceptual similarity to their function – these relationships can be ‘arbitrary’. The capacity to process these arbitrary form–function associations facilitates the enormous expressive power of language. However, the evolutionary roots of our capacity for arbitrariness, i.e. the extent to which related abilities may be shared with animals, is largely unexamined. We argue this is due to the challenges of applying such an intrinsically linguistic concept to animal communication, and address this by proposing a novel conceptual framework highlighting a key underpinning of linguistic arbitrariness, which is nevertheless applicable to non‐human species. Specifically, we focus on the capacity to associate alternative functions with a signal, or alternative signals with a function, a feature we refer to as optionality . We apply this framework to a broad survey of findings from animal communication studies and identify five key dimensions of communicative optionality: signal production, signal adjustment, signal usage, signal combinatoriality and signal perception. We find that optionality is widespread in non‐human animals across each of these dimensions, although only humans demonstrate it in all five. Finally, we discuss the relevance of optionality to behavioural and cognitive domains outside of communication. This investigation provides a powerful new conceptual framework for the cross‐species investigation of the origins of arbitrariness, and promises to generate original insights into animal communication and language evolution more generally.