Receptive Competencies of Language-Trained Animals
- Louis M. Herman and William N. Tavolga
- (c) 1987 Academic Press
Two major themes appear among the recent critiques
of the attempts to teach languages to great apes: (1) whether apes
can use the symbols (words) of a language as true surrogates for
the objects and events they reference, including objects and events
remote in time and space, and (2) whether apes can construct or
understand sentences by using
combinations of words as information. The first theme, recently
pursued most vigorously
by Savage-Rumbaugh and colleagues (e.g. Terrace et al., 1979), addresses
the syntactic aspect the information that is added to the
string of words comprising a sentence by the structure of the string,
such as the ordering of the words. In human languages it is most
often necessary to account for both the semantic and the syntactic
components of a sentence to interpret a sentence correctly. Semantics
and syntax have been described as the indispensable core attributes
of any human language.
The contention of the Savage-Rumbaugh group is that the use of symbols
by apes to name objects or to make requests for foods or other desirables
is not in itself evidence that the symbols function as surrogates
for objects and events, as do words in human languages. Careful
analysis of the majority of work with apes reveals that the symbols
used are often constrained to limited contexts and are principally
a learned means of obtaining a desired outcome. Typically, the words
are not used to refer ( cf. Terrace, 1985) but with
special training may eventually take on that function ( Savage-Rumbaugh
and Rumbaugh, 1978).
The syntactic issue, as raised in the review by Terrace et al. (1979)
( also see Rastau and Robbins, 1982), asked whether the language
produced by apes was grammatical, showing evidence of the use of
structure, such as word order, as information. Or, as the question
was put directly by Terrace et al. In the title of their 1979 paper,
Can an Ape Create a Sentence? It was acknowledged that
apes occasionally generated long strings of words but that successive
words added little or no information, being mainly repetitions,
synonyms, or the like, without elaboration or expansion of meaning.
For example, Terrace et al. Described one sequence produced by Nim,
the chimp they tutored in sign language. To request an orange, Nim
produced the following 16 signs: give orange me give eat orange
me eat orange give me eat orange give me you. Nim probably
did get the orange.
In other cases of apparently well-formed word sequences produced
by apes additional problems were sited by Terrace et al. (1979)
and in other reviews ( e.g., Bronowski and Bellugi, 1970; Fodor
et al., 1974; Petitto and Seidenberg, 1979; Ristau and Robbins,
1982; Savage-Rumbaugh et al., 1980; Seidenberg and Petitto, 1979,
1981; Terrace et al. 1981). These problems included insufficiencies
or deficiencies in the reporting of data; the presence of context
cues to guide responding, prompts, or other paralinguistic cues
from the trainers that may have led the ape into a prescribed series
of signs; the probable underreporting of examples that did not conform
to grammatical sequence; the practice in some cases of deleting
extraneous or redundant signs in reports of the sequences produced
by the apes; and the overinterpretation of a string of signs or
unique combination of words produced by the apes. Thus, when the
chimp Washoe signed water bird on seeing a swan in a
lake for the first time, did she create a novel combination of words
and thereby name the swan , or was she simply giving two independent
WATER-----BIRD? These criticisms cast grave doubt on
the evidence for the sentence-processing abilities of apes and,
by implication, on all of the claimed linguistic skills of these
animals.
Herman, L. M. (1987). Receptive competences of
language-trained animals. In J. S. Rosenblatt, C. Beer, M. C. Busnel,
& P. J. B. Slater (Eds.), Advances in the Study of Behavior.
Vol. 17, 1-60. Petaluma, CA: Academic Press.
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