European Commission logo
français français
CORDIS - Résultats de la recherche de l’UE
CORDIS
Contenu archivé le 2024-06-18

Meeting Darwin's last challenge: toward a global tree of human languages and genes

Objectif

Beyond its theoretical impact, the rise of molecular biology has brought about great progress also in the historical classification of species and populations. Sokal (1988) and Cavalli Sforza et. al. (1988, 1994) advocated a correspondence between some proposed language families and classical genetic markers, i.e. between biological evolution and transmission of cultural traits (languages), in agreement with Darwin’s (1859) prediction of an eventual isomorphy between trees of languages and populations. Their conclusions were variously criticised, and are especially undermined by the weakness of available language classification methods, mainly based on lexical (in a broad sense) material: these are either too narrow in scope (classical method) or probabilistically unreliable (Greenberg’s mass comparison) to provide solid long-range taxonomies to be matched against those of geneticists. We will address such issues with a radically new comparative method (Longobardi and Guardiano 2009) based entirely on grammatical evidence and on recent theoretical advances in formal and typological linguistics. The method ensures unprecedented standards of testability/replicability and can measure linguistic distances between even remote populations. Linguists and biologists will for the first time jointly select the populations most significant from either perspective for language/gene sampling. We will also adopt the newest powerful genetic tools of the last decade, both in terms of data (genome-wide studies of Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms, including uniparentally transmitted markers of the Y chromosome and of mitochondrial DNA) and of biostatistical methods to describe DNA diversity and interpret its relationships to linguistic diversity.

Appel à propositions

ERC-2011-ADG_20110406
Voir d’autres projets de cet appel

Régime de financement

ERC-AG - ERC Advanced Grant

Institution d’accueil

UNIVERSITY OF YORK
Contribution de l’UE
€ 2 063 200,00
Adresse
HESLINGTON
YO10 5DD York North Yorkshire
Royaume-Uni

Voir sur la carte

Région
Yorkshire and the Humber North Yorkshire York
Type d’activité
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Chercheur principal
Giuseppe Longobardi (Prof.)
Contact administratif
Caroline Moore (Ms.)
Liens
Coût total
Aucune donnée

Bénéficiaires (3)