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Lieberman, Philip

WORK TITLE: The Theory That Changed Everything
WORK NOTES:
PSEUDONYM(S):
BIRTHDATE: 1934
WEBSITE:
CITY:
STATE: RI
COUNTRY: United States
NATIONALITY: American

RESEARCHER NOTES: **Previously mentioned in CA 93-96**

PERSONAL

Born October 25, 1934, in Brooklyn, NY; son of Harry Israel and Miriam Lieberman; married Marcia Rubinstein (a writer), June 2, 1957; children: two sons; Benjamin and Daniel.

EDUCATION:

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, B.S.E.E. and M.S.E.E., 1958; Ph.D., 1966.

ADDRESS

  • Home - Providence, RI.
  • Office - Brown University, Box E, Providence, RI 02912.

CAREER

Writer. Brown University, Providence, RI, cognitive scientist, 1974-present; Fred M. Seed Professor of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences, 1997-present; professor of anthropology, 1999-present; George Hazard Crooker University Professor, emeritus, 2012-present. Worked formerly as a research assistant at M.I.T., as a researcher at the Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratories, as a researcher at Haskins Laboratories, at the University of Connecticut between 1967 and 1974, at Brown University as George Hazard Crooker Professor from 1992 to 1997.

MIILITARY:

Worked as a researcher in the United States Air Force, 1958-62.

AVOCATIONS:

Photography and mountaineering.

MEMBER:

Modern Language Association of America, Linguistic Society of America, Acoustical Society of America, American Association of Physical Anthropology, American Anthropological Association, Swiss Alpine Club.

AWARDS:

Guggenheim Fellowship in psychology, 1987.

WRITINGS

  • Intonation, Perception, and Language, M.I.T. Press (Cambridge, MA), 1967
  • Speech Acoustics and Perception, Bobbs-Merrill Co. (Indianapolis, IN), 1972
  • The Speech of Primates, The Hague, Mouton 1972
  • On the Origins of Language: An Introduction to the Evolution of Human Speech, Macmillan (New York, NY), 1975
  • Speech Physiology and Acoustic Phonetics: An Introduction, Macmillan (New York, NY), 1977
  • The Biology and Evolution of Language, Harvard University Press (Cambridge, MA), 1984
  • Speech Physiology, Speech Perception, and Acoustic Phonetics, Cambridge University Press (New York, NY), 1988
  • Uniquely Human: The Evolution of Speech, Thought, and Selfless Behavior, Harvard University Press (Cambridge, MA), 1991
  • Eve Spoke: Human Language and Human Evolution, W.W. Norton (New York, NY), 1998
  • Human Language and Our Reptilian Brain: The Subcortical Bases of Speech, Syntax, and Thought, Harvard University Press (Cambridge, MA), 2000
  • Toward an Evolutionary Biology of Language, Belknap Press of Harvard University Press (Cambridge, MA), 2006
  • The Unpredictable Species: What Makes Humans Unique, Princeton University Press (Princeton, NJ), 2013
  • The Theory That Changed Everything: "On the Origin of Species" as a Work in Progress, Columbia University Press (New York, NY), 2017

SIDELIGHTS

Philip Lieberman is a cognitive scientist and professor at Brown University. He is an expert on the evolution of language and linguistics. Lieberman’s main area of study is the nature and evolution of the biological bases of human language and cognition. His research arises from the notion that neural bases of human cognitive ability are the result of both Darwinian theory of natural selection combined with chance events that led to brain modifications. His research suggests that the combination of these two theories of evolutionary adaptation led to cognitive acts, such as language, by linking activity in prefrontal cortex with other cortical areas. Lieberman has published and lectured widely on these concepts.

Lieberman was born on October 25, 1934, in Brooklyn, New York to Harry Israel Lieberman and Miriam Lieberman. His father was a plumber. Lieberman attended college at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), where he studied electrical engineering. He returned to MIT to receive his Ph.D. in linguistics. He completed his dissertation in 1966.

Lieberman worked as a research scientist for MIT before serving in the United States Air Force between 1958 and 1967. Specifically, he worked for the Air Force Communication Research Laboratories in Bedford, Massachusetts. He then worked at the University of Connecticut, Storrs, as an associate professor of linguistics and electrical engineering from 1967 to 1970 and exclusively as a professor of linguistics at the University from 1970 to 1974. In 1974 Lieberman began working at Brown University as a linguistics professor.

Lieberman received a Guggenheim Fellowship in psychology in 1987. In 1990, he was offered the opportunity to give the Nijmegen Lectures of the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics. The title of the lectures was “The Evolution of Language and Cognition.” Between 1992 and 1997 he was a George Hazard Crooker Professor at the school. He was named Fred M. Seed Professor of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences in 1997 and Professor of Anthropology in 1999. He still holds both titles. Lieberman is a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Psychological Association, and the American Anthropological Association.

In addition to studying linguistics, Lieberman enjoys photography and mountaineering. His photographs can be seen at collections at the Rhode Island School of Design Museum and on the website of the Tibetan and Himalayan Digital Library. He also has a collection of over 400 photographs of Nepal that can be viewed at the Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology.

BIOCRIT

  • Intonation, Perception, and Language M.I.T. Press (Cambridge, MA), 1967
  • Speech Acoustics and Perception Bobbs-Merrill Co. (Indianapolis, IN), 1972
  • The Speech of Primates The Hague, Mouton 1972
  • On the Origins of Language: An Introduction to the Evolution of Human Speech Macmillan (New York, NY), 1975
  • Speech Physiology and Acoustic Phonetics: An Introduction Macmillan (New York, NY), 1977
  • The Biology and Evolution of Language Harvard University Press (Cambridge, MA), 1984
  • Speech Physiology, Speech Perception, and Acoustic Phonetics Cambridge University Press (New York, NY), 1988
  • Uniquely Human: The Evolution of Speech, Thought, and Selfless Behavior Harvard University Press (Cambridge, MA), 1991
  • Eve Spoke: Human Language and Human Evolution W.W. Norton (New York, NY), 1998
  • Human Language and Our Reptilian Brain: The Subcortical Bases of Speech, Syntax, and Thought Harvard University Press (Cambridge, MA), 2000
  • Toward an Evolutionary Biology of Language Belknap Press of Harvard University Press (Cambridge, MA), 2006
  • The Unpredictable Species: What Makes Humans Unique Princeton University Press (Princeton, NJ), 2013
  • The Theory That Changed Everything: "On the Origin of Species" as a Work in Progress Columbia University Press (New York, NY), 2017
1. The theory that changed everything : "On the origin of species" as a work in progress LCCN 2017007542 Type of material Book Personal name Lieberman, Philip, author. Main title The theory that changed everything : "On the origin of species" as a work in progress / Philip Lieberman. Published/Produced New York : Columbia University Press, 2017. Projected pub date 1711 Description pages cm ISBN 9780231178082 (cloth : alk. paper) Item not available at the Library. Why not? 2. The unpredictable species : what makes humans unique LCCN 2012037744 Type of material Book Personal name Lieberman, Philip. Main title The unpredictable species : what makes humans unique / Philip Lieberman. Published/Produced Princeton : Princeton University Press, [2013] Description xiv, 255 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm ISBN 9780691148588 (cloth : alk. paper) CALL NUMBER QP376 .L563 2013 Copy 2 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms CALL NUMBER QP376 .L563 2013 CABIN BRANCH Copy 1 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms - STORED OFFSITE 3. Toward an evolutionary biology of language LCCN 2005059101 Type of material Book Personal name Lieberman, Philip. Main title Toward an evolutionary biology of language / Philip Lieberman. Published/Created Cambridge, Mass. : Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2006. Description xi, 427 p. : ill. ; 25 cm. ISBN 0674021843 (cloth : alk. paper) CALL NUMBER P132 .L533 2006 Copy 1 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms CALL NUMBER P132 .L533 2006 LANDOVR Copy 2 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms - STORED OFFSITE 4. Human language and our reptilian brain : the subcortical bases of speech, syntax, and thought LCCN 99086092 Type of material Book Personal name Lieberman, Philip. Main title Human language and our reptilian brain : the subcortical bases of speech, syntax, and thought / Philip Lieberman. Published/Created Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press, 2000. Description 221 p. : ill. ; 24 cm. ISBN 0674002261 (alk. paper) Links Table of Contents http://lcweb.loc.gov/catdir/toc/99086092.html CALL NUMBER QP399 .L535 2000 FT MEADE Copy 2 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms - STORED OFFSITE 5. Eve spoke : human language and human evolution LCCN 97017100 Type of material Book Personal name Lieberman, Philip. Main title Eve spoke : human language and human evolution / Philip Lieberman. Published/Created New York : W.W. Norton, c1998. Description xvi,192 p. : ill. ; 22 cm. ISBN 0393040895 CALL NUMBER P116 .L53 1998 Copy 1 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms CALL NUMBER P116 .L53 1998 FT MEADE Copy 2 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms - STORED OFFSITE 6. Uniquely human : the evolution of speech, thought, and selfless behavior LCCN 90038130 Type of material Book Personal name Lieberman, Philip. Main title Uniquely human : the evolution of speech, thought, and selfless behavior / Philip Lieberman. Published/Created Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press, 1991. Description 210 p. : ill. ; 24 cm. ISBN 0674921828 (alk. paper) CALL NUMBER GN281.4 .L54 1991 LANDOVR Copy 1 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms - STORED OFFSITE CALL NUMBER GN281.4 .L54 1991 FT MEADE Copy 2 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms - STORED OFFSITE 7. Speech physiology, speech perception, and acoustic phonetics LCCN 87013187 Type of material Book Personal name Lieberman, Philip. Main title Speech physiology, speech perception, and acoustic phonetics / Philip Lieberman and Sheila E. Blumstein. Published/Created Cambridge [Cambridgeshire] ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 1988. Description xv, 249 p. : ill. ; 23 cm. ISBN 0521308666 0521313570 (pbk.) Links Sample text http://www.loc.gov/catdir/samples/cam034/87013187.html Publisher description http://www.loc.gov/catdir/description/cam023/87013187.html Table of contents http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/cam024/87013187.html CALL NUMBER QP306 .L53 1988 CABIN BRANCH Copy 1 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms - STORED OFFSITE 8. On the origins of language : an introduction to the evolution of human speech LCCN 87029598 Type of material Book Personal name Lieberman, Philip. Main title On the origins of language : an introduction to the evolution of human speech / Philip Lieberman. Published/Created Lanham, MD : University Press of America, [1987], c1975. Description 196 p. : ill. ; 23 cm. ISBN 0819167487 (pbk. : alk. paper) : CALL NUMBER P116 .L5 1987 Copy 1 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms 9. The biology and evolution of language LCCN 83022582 Type of material Book Personal name Lieberman, Philip. Main title The biology and evolution of language / Philip Lieberman. Published/Created Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press, 1984. Description viii, 379 p. : ill. ; 25 cm. ISBN 0674074122 (alk. paper) CALL NUMBER P132 .L53 1984 Copy 1 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms CALL NUMBER P132 .L53 1984 FT MEADE Copy 2 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms - STORED OFFSITE 10. Speech physiology and acoustic phonetics : an introduction LCCN 76019003 Type of material Book Personal name Lieberman, Philip. Main title Speech physiology and acoustic phonetics : an introduction / Philip Lieberman. Published/Created New York : Macmillan, c1977. Description xiv, 206 p. : ill. ; 24 cm. ISBN 0023706201 CALL NUMBER QP306 .L52 FT MEADE Copy 2 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms - STORED OFFSITE 11. On the origins of language; an introduction to the evolution of human speech. LCCN 74005720 Type of material Book Personal name Lieberman, Philip. Main title On the origins of language; an introduction to the evolution of human speech. Published/Created New York, Macmillan [1975] Description viii, 196 p. illus. 24 cm. ISBN 0023706902 CALL NUMBER P116 .L5 Copy 1 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms 12. The speech of primates. LCCN 72088194 Type of material Book Personal name Lieberman, Philip. Main title The speech of primates. Published/Created The Hague, Mouton, 1972 [1973] Description 141 p. with illus. 23 cm. CALL NUMBER QL737.P9 L43 CABIN BRANCH Copy 1 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms - STORED OFFSITE 13. Speech acoustics and perception. LCCN 70183114 Type of material Book Personal name Lieberman, Philip. Main title Speech acoustics and perception. Published/Created Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill Co. [1972] Description 34 p. illus. 23 cm. CALL NUMBER BF455 .L485 Copy 1 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms 14. Intonation, perception, and language. LCCN 67013392 Type of material Book Personal name Lieberman, Philip. Main title Intonation, perception, and language. Published/Created Cambridge, M.I.T. Press [1967] Description xiii, 210 p. illus. 25 cm. CALL NUMBER P222 .L5 Copy 1 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms CALL NUMBER P222 .L5 FT MEADE Copy 2 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms - STORED OFFSITE
  • Wikipedia - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Lieberman

    Philip Lieberman
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    Philip Lieberman (born 1934)[1] is a cognitive scientist at Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, United States. Originally trained in phonetics, he wrote a dissertation on intonation. His career has focused on topics in the evolution of language, and particularly the relationship between the evolution of the vocal tract, the human brain, and the evolution of speech, cognition and language.[2]

    Contents
    1 Biography
    2 Partial list of works
    3 References
    4 External links
    Biography
    Lieberman initially studied electrical engineering at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). His doctorate was in linguistics, with his dissertation completed in 1966. In the late 1950s and in the 1960s he worked as a research assistant at MIT before serving in the United States Air Force and also carrying out research there at the Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratories (AFCRL) at Hanscom Air Force Base and also working at Haskins Laboratories. From 1967 to 1974 he worked at the University of Connecticut.[3][4]

    In 1974 he was appointed to the faculty at Brown University, where he was George Hazard Crooker Professor from 1992 to 1997. Since 1997 he has been the Fred M. Seed Professor of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences, and since 1999 he has been Professor of Anthropology, both at Brown University. Since 2012, when he retired from teaching,he has been The George Hazard Crooker University Professor, emeritus[4]

    Lieberman was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in psychology in 1987.[5] In 1990, Lieberman gave the Nijmegen Lectures of the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics under the title 'The evolution of language and cognition'.[6] He is also a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Psychological Association, and the American Anthropological Association.[2]

    Lieberman's interests include photography and mountaineering.[2] A collection of over 400 photographs of Nepal by Lieberman is held at the Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology.[7] Lieberman's photographs have also been exhibited at and are in the collections at the Rhode Island School of Design Museum.[8] His photographs of life in remote Himalayan regions can be viewed on the website of the Tibetan and Himalayan Digital Library.[9]

    Partial list of works
    Lieberman, Philip (June 1975). On the Origins of Language. New York: Macmillan. ISBN 0-02-370690-2.
    Lieberman, Philip (1984). The Biology and Evolution of Language. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-07413-0.
    Lieberman, Philip (2000). Human Language and Our Reptilian Brain. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-00793-2.
    Lieberman, Philip (2006). Towards an Evolutionary Biology of Language. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-02184-3.
    Lieberman, Philip (2013). The Unpredictable Species. Princeton University Press.

  • Brown University - http://www.cog.brown.edu/people_lieberman_personal.htm

    Philip Lieberman's central interest is the nature and evolution of the biological bases of human language and cognition. In essence, his work centers on the evolution of modern human beings since these are among the central attributes that differentiate us from apes. His outlook, therefore, is shaped by principles and procedures of Evolutionary Biology. As Theodosius Dobzhansky noted, "Nothing in biology makes sense except in light of evolution." Conversely, the mark of evolution is evidence in the anatomy and physiology of the human brain and body.

    Lieberman’s studies support the view that neural bases of human cognitive ability represent the result of both Darwinian Natural Selection and chance events which modified brain mechanisms whose original function was motor control. This process yielded neural circuits that regulate cognitive acts, including language, by linking activity in prefrontal cortex with other cortical areas through shared, common subcortical structures, such as the basal ganglia. This view contrasts with theories such as the 19 th century Broca-Wernicke “language organ” theory, that compartmentalize the brain into localized “modules” that each regulate some distinct capacity. In brief, the neural bases of human cognitive ability, marked by its creative capacity whether expressed in complex language and thought processes, or seemingly unrelated acts such as dancing, are commingled. Moreover, studies of the speech anatomy of human infants, apes and examination of the fossil record suggest that fully modern human beings who could talk and think as we do, appeared comparatively recently – somewhere between 70,000 and 50,000 years ago.

    The experimental findings germane to these theories derive from studies over the course of forty years by Lieberman and his colleagues which demonstrate the role of evolution in matching anatomical capabilities for speech with brain mechanisms that regulate motor control as well as cognition. Studies of the development of human speech producing anatomy in infants and comparative studies of non-human primates show that the unique human tongue and upper airway enhance the processes by which speech is produced and perceived, at the expense of increasing the risk of choking on food. Although most linguists, influenced by Noam Chomsky have focused on syntax as the unique feature of human linguistic ability, speech occupies a central role in language; it allows us to communicate information at an exceeding rapid rate. Human speech entails having both unique, species-specific anatomy and neural motor-control capabilities. Therefore, the presence of human tongues 50,000 years ago is an index for brains that could rapidly sequence the gestures necessary to produce voluntary speech, a capability absent in apes, else the propensity to increase the risk of death by choking would not have led to its retention.

    Lieberman’s joint research with medical school faculty, other colleagues, and Brown University graduate and undergraduate students have revealed a “syndrome” – a pattern of speech motor and cognitive deficits occurs that derive from impaired subcortical basal ganglia structures. Ongoing studies of Parkinson’s disease, childhood developmental verbal apraxia, Rolandic epilepsy, autism, hypoxic insult to the brain arising from exposure to extreme altitude as climbers ascend Mount Everest, and focal brain lesions provide an opportunity for both graduate and undergraduate students to participate in research. Other studies on speech production have synthesized the vowels that Neanderthals could have uttered. The findings of these studies have been applied to the diagnosis and treatment of these conditions as well as monitoring systems for exposure to high-intensity radiation in space travel, which produces damage to neural circuits involving the basal ganglia.

    The relevance of these findings to linguistic theories such as those proposed by Chomsky and Pinker is discussed in his books which include, The biology and evolution of language (1984), Human language and our reptilian brain: The subcortical bases of speech, syntax and thought (2000), and Toward an evolutionary biology of language (2006), all published by Harvard University Press. The general constraints of evolutionary biology and genetic data argue against any version of Chomsky’s, “Universal Grammar,” including its most recent version, the “narrow faculty of language.” Lieberman’s other research interests include the expression of emotion and how genes influence behavior.

    Lieberman received a Guggenheim Fellowship, presented the 1990 Nijmegen Lectures of the Max Planck Institut fur Psycholoinguistic, was a NATO Visiting Professor, and is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, The American Psychological association, and the American Anthropological Association. He also holds an appointment at Brown University as Professor of Anthropology. He has lifelong interests in mountain walking, climbing and photography. Lieberman’s photographic exhibits and publications are listed in Who’s who in American art. He has documented life in traditional Tibetan settings. His photographs also illustrate his wife, Marcia’s articles and guidebooks on mountain walking and trekking in the Alps and Himalaya and document the 15 th century Tibetan Buddhist wall paintings in the temples of the Mustang region of Nepal in a joint study with her that was commissioned by the Getty Foundation.

  • Brown University - https://www.brown.edu/Departments/CLPS/people/philip-lieberman

    Philip Lieberman

    George Hazard Crooker University Professor, Emeritus

    Philip_Lieberman@brown.edu
    (401) 863-1857
    Office Location:
    Metcalf 243
    Research Focus:
    Evolution of biological bases of language and thought
    Read the recent interview in Zurich with Professor Lieberman on his new book: The Unpredictable Species: What Makes Humans Unique.

    I study the evolution of human linguistic and cognitive ability. In the 1970s my focus was on the evolution of the vocal anatomy that makes human speech possible. My current work concerns the neural circuits that regulate syntax, cognition as well as speech production and other aspects of motor control. These circuits, which involve the basal ganglia and other subcortical structures, are related through their evolutionary history. My research also involves applications such as voice monitoring cognition and emotion, and the assessment of Parkinson's and other neurodegenerative diseases, and of verbal apraxia and its genetic bases in children.

  • Brown University - http://www.brown.edu/Departments/CLPS/system/files/lieberman-interview-2013-EN.pdf

    Neue Züricher Zeitung – Forschung und Technik - 14. August 2013, Nr. 186, 52
    No motor action is more difficult to coordinate than speaking
    Linguist and cognitive scientists Philip Lieberman about the evolution of our ability to
    speak
    Philip Lieberman had a long career. He was one of the first linguists to work in the
    Darwinian framework of natural selection. His new book, The Unpredictable Species:
    What Makes Humans Unique, explains what creativity and language have in common.
    Mr. Lieberman, is language a biological or a cultural phenomenon?
    It is both. All humans have the same cognitive abilities. The cultural framework
    determines which language they speak and how complex it is. The structure of our brains
    makes it possible to acquire language. This happens through learning processes. We need
    neither a specific language organ nor a universal grammar.
    UG is a concept of the American linguist Noam Chomsky. It claims that all human
    languages follow the same grammatical principles, which are innate. You do not share
    Chomsky’s view?
    His concept does not work. For example the passive of Turkish violates a principle that is
    supposed to be universal. In Brazil exists the Pirahã language. It also lacks an element
    that Chomsky claims all languages share: complexity1
    . Chomsky’s theory makes the
    wrong predictions.
    You have been once Noam Chomsky’s student.
    That is true. I took his courses when I studied engineering sciences. But later I moved
    slowly away from his views. His explanations made less and less sense to me. At the
    core, all languages seem to be like English.
    How did you come to linguistics from engineering?
    In my dissertation I worked on breathing control during speech and investigated the
    complex regulation of the muscles that are involved. That means I started to deal with
    biology, and I read the books of evolutionary biologist Ernst Mayr. At that time I was one
    of the first linguists who worked in the framework of Darwinian natural selection.
    Evolution also plays an important role in your newest book [not yet available in
    German]. Why did you call it ‘The unpredictable Species’?

    In my book I deal with the questions why are humans creative and whether the brain
    bases of creativity and language are connected. The answer is: of course, the cognitive
    abilities that have evolved in humans underlie both creativity and language. Our behavior
    is not as determined by our genes as that of other organisms. In novel situations
    individuals can invent new things and modes of behavior that are copied by almost
    everyone else. Our culture, our behavior, and our languages are constantly changing. In
    this sense we are unpredictable.
    Chimpanzees also have considerable cognitive abilities. Why are they not able to speak?
    Their brain does not allow them to learn and execute the complex motor routines that are
    needed for speech. No other human motor routine is harder to learn than speech. Only by
    age of 10 – 12 years do children speak at the same level of proficiency as adults. Speech
    also involves add anatomy: humans have the strangest tongues of all animals. The human
    tongue is sited way down in the throat, which enhances the process by which speech ie
    perceived. But that comes at the cost of increased risk of suffocating while swallowing
    food. In the USA this is still the 4th common cause of accidental death. Newborns have
    still the entire tongue in the mouth. Neanderthal skulls look like enlarged infant heads
    because Neanderthals did not have their tongues and larynx sited as low in the throat as
    we do.
    In 1971 you were one of the first to simulate the speech of Neanderthals with
    computational models. How did you do that?
    Because of the similarities between newborns and Neanderthals we used x-rays from
    infants who were swallowing and screaming to simulate the speaking abilities of
    Neanderthals on a computer. We discovered they could make all the sounds except for i,
    u, and a.
    So Neanderthals already spoke to one another?
    They certainly had a language. Our scientific paper from 1971 is often misinterpreted.
    We never denied that Neanderthals spoke. Our conclusion was that they could speak, just
    not as efficiently as we.
    Was this inefficient speech of the Neanderthals still useful?
    Even though there was a pretty high error rate they could communicate, certainly an
    advantage. The fact that humans evolved our strange tongue indicates that the ancestors
    of modern humans and Neanderthals had speech. Otherwise this adaptation would have
    brought no advantage. I believe language evolved gradually through a process that began
    several million years ago. Possibly even Homo erectus had already a form of speech. I
    have changed my view on this. Earlier I thought, the evolution of our ability to speak
    began a few hundreds of thousands of years ago.
    Are there also genetic data that corroborate this?
    The FOXP2-gen, which played an important role in the evolution of our ability to speak,
    is different in modern humans and Neanderthals compared to chimpanzees. This change
    must have occurred before modern humans and Neanderthals split roughly 500,000 years
    ago. But there is an additional mutation, which is only found in the modern human
    version of FOXP2. This was probably essential for the evolution of the human brain.
    How did the possibility of genetic research change your field of research?
    Now we can trace the changes that affected the human brain on a fundamental level – and
    in the distant past. Thanks to complete DNA profiles from bones that are thousands of
    years old speculation about the Neanderthal brain has been replaced by objective
    research.
    How important are image-creating techniques in language and cognitive research?
    The problem is that some of these techniques produce nonsensical results. You can, for
    example, attempt to isolate a part of the brain area that allows us to playing tennis. You
    can start by imaging the brain of someone who first imagines playing tennis and image
    the person while they imagine themselves just running back and forth. If you then
    subtract the running around neuroimaging from that of imaging that you’re playing tennis
    can identify the supposed center or neural module for playing tennis. That is of course,
    nonsense. But there are researchers who are identifying modules for morality or religion
    in this manner.
    What are, nevertheless, the advantaged of these new [imaging] techniques?
    If used properly they allow indeed finding out more about the function of certain brain
    structures. But it is important to keep in mind that the brain does not consist of modules
    that each control a particular aspect of behavior. The brain is a complex system, the parts
    of which are connected by circuits. Some of the circuits share elements. Interestingly our
    neuronal circuits are very similar to those of rhesus monkeys. But we are neither rhesus
    monkeys nor chimpanzees. The key difference probably in regulatory genes like FOXP2
    which increase the efficiency of the entire circuit.

    Then there is no module for language in the brain, like say the Broca-area?
    A module for language does not exist. A whole series of structures must work together to
    enable various linguistic processes. For example when one retrieves words from memory,
    a circuit that links areas of the prefrontal cortex, basal ganglia, and other sub-cortical
    structures is activated. The circuit is connected to brain structures that store memories.
    But the theory that the Broca-area is the language center is still widely accepted.
    Probably because it intuitively explains our language ability. But in the 1980s researchers
    showed that humans do not suffer permanent language loss, except when subcortical
    regions are damaged. And on the other hand, there are many cases in which patients had a
    completely destroyed Broca’s area after a stroke and ability to use language returned.
    Do you think that the basal ganglia (brain-structures with motor- and cognitive
    functions] play an important role for language [speech]? What supports this view?
    Basal ganglia are involved in many functions. They evolved hundreds of millions of
    years ago in animals that are similar to modern frogs. But the capacity of the human basal
    ganglia has been massively increased during the last 200,000 years through genes like
    FOXP2. That’s why we have neural circuits that enable human language, creativity, and
    fine motor control. In Parkinson disease, where basal ganglia activity is compromised,
    one thus finds a syndrome - symptoms that are seemingly completely unrelated to each
    other. Besides cognitive deficits there are also language impairments, fine motor
    impairments and changes in personality. This shows that different parts of the brain
    communicate via the basal ganglia.
    How do speech problems manifest themselves in Parkinson patients?
    They have difficulties understanding sentences that 10-year old children easily
    comprehend. We tested medication that improves basal ganglia function for Parkinson
    patients. The patients showed much better comprehension with medication than without.
    Similar deficits occur in high altitude mountain climbers. We tested climbers at Mount
    Everest and found that at higher altitude they had problems with speech coordination.
    The basal ganglia need more oxygen than other parts of the brain and are affected first in
    high altitudes.
    What makes you proud when you look back at your scientific career?
    I am glad that I can say that some of the theses I introduced in presentations, scientific
    papers and books have been confirmed or improved by newly available scientific
    methods. Others have been disproven. But that is equally important.

  • Philip Lieberman Curriculum Vitae - https://vivo.brown.edu/docs/drrb/1106970096.pdf?nocache=697510682

    CURRICULUM VITAE--- Philip Lieberman
    1..
    Philip LiebermanFred M. Seed Professor of Cognitive and Linguistic SciencesDepartment of
    Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences
    Professor of Anthropology
    Department of Anthropology
    Brown UniversityBox 1978Providence, RI 02912(401) 863-1857E-MAIL:
    Philip_Lieberman@Brown.edu2 Home Address:141 Elton St.Providence, RI 02906Phone:
    (401)831-0720Fax: (401) 274-3739
    3. EducationB.S. in Electrical Engineering, M.I.T.M.S. in Electrical Engineering, M.I.T.
    1958Ph.D. Linguistics, M.I.T. 1966Dissertation title: "Intonation, Perception and Language"4.
    Professional Appointments1957-59Research Assistant, Research Laboratory of Electronics,
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology1958-62. Lieutenant, United States Air Force: 1962-67
    Research Staff, Speech Research Branch, Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratories1967.
    Research Staff Member, Haskins Laboratories.Associate Professor, University of Connecticut;
    Professor, 1969; Acting Head, Department of Linguistics 1973-741974. Professor, Brown
    University
    1975-77, 1981-86. Chairman, Department of Linguistics1988 - 1991, Chairman, Department
    Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences
    1992 -1997 George Hazard Crooker University Professor
    1997 -- Fred M. Seed Professor of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences
    1999 -- Professor of Anthropology
    5. Completed Research
    a. BOOKS
    Lieberman, P., 1967. Intonation, perception and language. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
    Lieberman, P., 1971. Speech acoustics and perception. Indianapolis :Bobbs-Merrill.
    Lieberman, P., 1972. The Speech of Primates. The Hague: Mouton and Company.
    Lieberman, P., 1975. On the Origins of Language: An Introduction to the Evolution of Speech,
    New York: Macmillan.
    Lieberman, P., 1977. Speech Physiology and Acoustic Phonetics, New York: Macmillan.
    Lieberman, P., 1984. The Biology and Evolution of Language. Cambridge, MA: Harvard
    University Press.
    Lieberman, M. and P. Lieberman, 1987. Walking in Switzerland: The Swiss Way. Seattle, WA:
    The Mountaineers Books., 2nd edition 1997.
    Lieberman P. and Blumstein, S.E., 1987. Speech Physiology, Acoustics, and Perception
    Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    Lieberman, P. 1991. Uniquely human: The evolution of speech, thought and selfless behavior,
    Cambridge Ma.: Harvard University Press.Selection of the Library of Science Book Club.
    Lieberman, P. 1998, Eve spoke; Human Language and Human Evolution. New York: W. W.
    Norton. London: Picador, Macmillan. Selection of the Library of Science Book Club.
    Lieberman, M. and P. Lieberman 1998. Switzerland's Mountain Inns, Countryman Press
    (Division of W W Norton: New York) -- Photographs
    Lieberman, P. 2000. Human language and our reptilian brain: The subcortical bases of speech,
    syntax, and thought, Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press. (Perspectives in Cognitive
    Neuroscience). Paperback edition published 2002.
    Lieberman P. (2002) Eeeva Puhui Helsinki:Terra Cognita (Finnish translation of Eve Spoke
    (1998)
    Lieberman, M., P. Lieberman and N. Jorden. 2003. The Tibetan Buddhist Wall Paintings of
    Mustang. Commissioned by the Getty Foundation. Brown University Website.URL:
    http://dl.lib.brown.edu/BuddhistTempleArt and DVD with Jpeg and TIF files (1020 images plus
    text)
    Lieberman P. 2005. Lieberman Collection of 155 photographs documenting traditional life in the
    Tibetan Himalaya and Kathmandu Nepal. Tibetan and Himalayan Digital Library (THDL): URL:
    http://www.thdl.org/collections/resources/image search.php
    Select COLLECTIONS then SPECIAL COLLECTIONS fields and then scroll to Lieberman
    collections which are grouped by region.
    Lieberman, P. 2006. Toward an evolutionary biology of language. Cambridge Mass: Harvard
    University Press
    PATENT:Lieberman, P., 1963. Method and system for acoustic detection of pathologic
    larynges. Patent No. 3,245,403/March 12, 1966.
    B. CHAPTERS IN BOOKS:
    Lieberman, P., 1968. "Vocal cord motion in man." Proc. N.Y. Academy of Science Conference
    on Sound Production in Man. New York Academy of Science 155:28-38.Sachs, J., Lieberman,
    P. and D. Erickson, 1972. "Anatomical and cultural determinants of male and female speech."
    In: Language attitudes: current trends and prospects, Monograph No. 25, Georgetown
    University Monograph Series in Language and Linguistics, Georgetown University, Washington,
    DC.
    Lieberman, P., 1973. On the evolution of speech. Festschrift for Morris Halle. S. Anderson and
    P. Kiparsky (eds.) New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 107-127.
    Lieberman, P., 1974. A study of the prosodic features. In: Current Trends in Linguistics, Vol.
    12, T.A. Sebeok, ed., The Hague: Mouton and Company.Lieberman, P., 1975. The Evolution of
    Speech and Language, in The Role of Speech in Language, James F. Kavanagh and James E.
    Cutting (eds.).
    Lieberman, P., 1976 "Interactive models for evolution: Neural mechanisms, anatomy and
    behavior", in Origins and Evolution of Language and Speech, Annals of the New York Academy
    of Sciences¯, S.E. Harnard, H.D. Steklis and J. Lancaster (eds.), Vol. 280:660-672.
    Lieberman, P., 1977. The Phylogeny of Language in How Animals Communicate, T. A. Sebeok
    (ed.) Indiana University Press, pp. 3-25.
    Lieberman, P., 1980. On the development of vowel production in young children, in Child
    Phonology: Perception and Production, G. Yeni-Komshian and J Kavanagh (eds.), New York:
    Academic Press, pp. 113-142.Lieberman, P., 1981. Phonetics and Physiology: Some Current
    Issues, in Perspectives on Experimental Linguistics. G.E. Pridow, John Benjamins (ed.),
    Amsterdam, 1-34.Lieberman, P., 1982. The Innate Central Aspect of Intonation. for Festschrift
    for Dwight L. Bolinger, L.R. Waugh and C.H. von Schoonevelt (eds.).
    Lieberman, P., 1985. On the genetic basis of linguistic variation, in Invariance and Variability
    of Speech Processes. J. Perkell, G. Fant, B. Lindblom, D. Klatt and S. Shattuck-Huffnagel
    (eds.), Erlbaum.
    Lieberman P., 1985. On the Acquisition by Infants: Physiology and Neural Control, in Intonation
    & Discourse. San Diego, California: College Hill Press, pp. 239-259.
    Lieberman, P., 1986. "The Physiology of Cry and Speech in Relation to Linguistic Behavior" in
    Infant Crying: Theoretical and Research Perspectives, B Lester and D. Boukydis (eds.) Plenium
    Press.
    Lieberman, P., 1986. The Developmental Physiology of Speech and the Evolution of Language.
    in R.J. Ruben, T.R. Van de Water, and E.W, Rubel (eds.) The Biology of Change in
    Otolaryngology, Amsterdam: Excerpta Medica.
    Lieberman, P., 1988. Language, communication and rule-governed behavior. In H.J. Jerison and
    I. Jerison, Intelligence and evolutionary biology. Berlin: Springer-Verlag, pp. 143-
    156.Lieberman, P., 1989. Some biological constraints on universal grammar In Learnability and
    Teachability of Language. Schiefelbusch, R.L. and M. Rice (eds.).
    Lieberman, P., 1989. The origins of some aspects of human language and cognition. In The
    human revolution: Behavioral and biological perspectives of the origins of modern humans. P.
    Mellars and C.B. Stringer (eds.) pp. 391-414, Edinburgh University Press.
    Lieberman, P. 1990. The Evolution of Human Language. Seminars in Speech and Language.
    11:63-76.
    Lieberman, P. 1991. Language, Evolution. Encyclopedia of Human Biology, Vol. 4. New York:
    Academic Press, pp. 641-645.
    Lieberman, P., 1991. On the evolutionary biology of speech and syntax. Language Origin: A
    Multidisciplinary Approach. J. Wind, et al. (eds.), pp 409-429, The Netherlands: Kluwer
    Academic Publishers.
    Lieberman, P. 1992. On the Evolution of Language, In J. A. Hawkins and M. Gell-Mann, Eds.
    The Evolution of Human Languages. Reading, MA, Addison Wesley, pp. 21-48.Lieberman, P.,
    1992. Speech, Collier's Encyclopedia, New York: Macmillan.Lieberman, P. 1994. Human
    communication: Anatomical and physiological aspects. The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Human
    Evolution. S. Jones, R. Martin, D. Pilbeam and (eds), Cambridge University Press.pp. 134-137.
    Lieberman, P. 1994. The origins and evolution of language. Companion Encyclopedia of
    Anthropology: Humanity, Culture, and Social Life T. Ingold (ed.), London and New York:
    Routledge, pp. 108-132.
    Lieberman, P. 1994. Biologically bound behavior, free-will, and human evolution. In Conflict
    and Cooperation in Nature. ed. J. I. Casti, New York: John Wiley and Sons. pp. 133-
    163.Friedman, J. and Lieberman, P. 1994. Speech motor and cognitive deficits of Parkinson's
    disease. in A. D. Korczn (Ed.) Dementia in Parkinson's Disease. Bologna (Italy):Monduzzi
    Editore
    Lieberman, P. 1995. What Primate Calls Can Tell Us About Human Evolution. in E.
    Zimmermann, J. D. Newman, and U. Jurgens (Eds.) Current topics in primate vocal
    communication. New York:Plenum Press, pp. 273-282.
    Lieberman, P. 1995. Some biological constraints on the analysis of prosody. In J. L. Morgan and
    K. Demuth (eds.) Signal to Syntax: Bootstrapping from speech to grammar in early acquisition.
    Hillsdale NJ: Earlbaum Associate. pp. 55-66.
    Lieberman, P. (1997) "Language evolution", in Dulbecco, R. (Ed.) Encyclopedia of Human
    Biology, 2nd Edition, Academic Press:San Diego, pp. 243-247.
    Lieberman, P. 2001 "On the subcortical bases of the evolution of language. In J. Trabant and S.
    Ward (eds.) New essays on the evolution of language. Berlin-New York:Mouton de Gruyter. pp.
    21-40.
    Lieberman, P. (2001) On the neural bases of spoken language. In. In the Mind's Eye:
    Multidisciplinary perspectives on the evolution of the human mind. A. Nowell (Ed.) Ann Arbor:
    International Monographs in Prehistory. pp. 172-186.
    Lieberman, P. 2002 "Evolution of Language," In Encyclopedia of Evolution, M. Pagel, Ed..
    Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 605-607.
    Lieberman P. 2002. The evolution of speech in relation to language and thought. In. Harcourt, C.
    S. and Sherwood, B. R. (Eds) New Perspectives in Primate Evolution and Behaviour. Otley,
    UK:Westbury, pp. 105-126.
    Lieberman, P. 2003. Language evolution and Innateness. In M. T. Banich and M Mack (Eds)
    Mind, Brain and Language. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, pp. 3-22.
    Lieberman, P. 2003. Motor control, speech and the evolution of human language," In M. H.
    Christianson and J. R. Hurford, Eds. Language evolution. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    pp.255-271.
    Lieberman, P. 2004. Subcortical brain circuits, speech and the evolution of semeosis. In M. Alac
    and P. Violi (Eds) In the beginning: evolution of semeosis. pp. 189-205.
    Lieberman, P. 2006. The FOXP2 gene, human cognition and language. In. Integrative
    approaches to human health and evolution. T. C. Brommage, E. Aguirre and A. Perez-Ochoa
    Eds. Elsevier: Amsterdam, pp. 115-126.
    Lieberman, P. (in press) Evolution of Language 1: Overview. Encyclopedia of Linguistics,
    Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn.
    Lieberman, P. (in press) Evolution of Language 3: Physical Preadaptations. Encyclopedia of
    Linguistics, Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn.
    Lieberman,in press. The basal ganglia and language, In Cambridge Encyclopedia of the
    Language Sciences. Ed. P. Hogan.
    C. REFEREED JOURNAL ARTICLES (INCLUDING ONES REPRINTED IN BOOKS):
    American English." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 32:451-454. (Reprinted in
    Readings in Acoustic Phonetics, D.B. Fry (ed.), London: Penguin Books).Lieberman, P., 1961.
    "Perturbations in vocal pitch." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 33:597-
    603.Lieberman, P. and S. B. Michaels, 1962. "Some aspects of fundamental frequency and
    envelope amplitude as related to the emotional context of speech." Journal of the Acoustical
    Society of America. 34:922-927. (Reprinted in Intonation: Selected Readings, D. Bolinger (ed.),
    London: Penguin Books).Lieberman, P., 1963. "Some acoustic measures of the fundamental
    periodicity of normal and pathologic larynges." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America,
    35:344-353.Lieberman, P., 1963. "Some effects of semantic and grammatical context on the
    production and perception of speech." Language and Speech. 6(3).Lieberman, P., 1965. "On the
    acoustic basis of the perception of intonation by linguists." Word 21:40-54. (Reprinted in
    Readings in the Psychology of Language, Oldfield and Marshall (eds.), London: Penguin Books;
    and Intonation: Selected Readings, D. Bolinger (ed.), London: Penguin Books).Lieberman, P.,
    1968. "Direct comparison of sub-glottal and esophageal pressure during speech." Journal of the
    Acoustical Society of America 43:1157-1164.Lieberman, P., 1968. "Primate vocalizations and
    human linguistic ability." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 44:1574-1784.
    (Reprinted in Perspectives on Human Evolution. 2. Washburn and Dolhinow (eds.) New York:
    Holt, Reinhart and Winston; and in The Speech Code, Mattingly and Engelhardt (eds.),
    Sinauer.)Lieberman, P., D.L. Klatt and W. A. Wilson, 1969. "Vocal tract limitations on the
    vowel repertoires of rhesus monkey and other nonhuman primates." Science 164: 1185-
    1187Lieberman, P., Knudson, R. and J. Mead, 1969. "Determination of the rate of change of
    fundamental frequency with respect to sub-glottal air pressure during sustained phonation."
    Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 45:1537-1543.Lieberman, P., 1969. "On the
    acoustic analysis of primate vocalizations." Behavior Research Methods and Instruments. 1:169-
    174.
    Lieberman, P., 1970. "Towards a unified phonetic theory." Linguistic Inquiry. 1:307-
    322.Lieberman, P.,Sawashima, M., Harris, K.S. and T. Gay, 1970. "The articulatory
    implementation of the breath-group and prominence: crico-thyroid muscular activity in
    intonation." Language 46:312-327.Lieberman, P. and E.S. Crelin, 1971. "On the speech of
    Neanderthal man." Linguistic Inquiry. 2:203-222.Lieberman, P., Harris, K.S., Wolff, P. and L.H.
    Russell, 1972. "Newborn infant cry and nonhuman-primate vocalizations." Journal of Speech
    and Hearing Research. 14:718-727.Lieberman, P., Crelin, E.S. and D. Klatt, 1972. "Phonetic
    ability and related anatomy of newborn and adult human Neanderthal man and the chimpanzee."
    American Anthropologist. 74:287-307. (also reprinted in The Speech Code. I.G. Mattingly and
    S. Engelhardt (eds.) New York: Sinnauer Association.Lieberman, M.R. and P. Lieberman, 1973.
    "Olson's "projective verse" and the use of breath control as a structural element." Language and
    Style. 5:287-298.Lieberman, P., Crelin, E.S. and D.H. Klatt, 1973. "Reply to "A Note on
    Phonetic Ability." American Anthropologist 75:1719-1721.
    Lieberman, P. 1973. On the evolution of human language: a unified view. Cognition 2:59-64.
    Lieberman, P. and E.S. Crelin, 1974. "Speech and Neanderthal Man: A Reply to Carlisle and
    Siegel." American Anthropologist, 76: No. 2.Lieberman, P., 1975. "More discussion of
    Neanderthal speech." Linguistic Inquiry, 6:325-329.Lieberman, P., 1976. "Phonetic Features
    and Physiology: A Reappraisal." Journal of Phonetics, 4:91-112.Lieberman, P., 1977 "More on
    hominid evolution, speech and language." Current Anthropology 18:550-551.Lieberman, P.
    1978. "A reply to Carlisle and Siegel's assessment of Neanderthal Speech Capabilities."
    American Anthropologist, 80:676-681.Lieberman, P., 1979. "Hominid evolution, supralaryngeal
    vocal tract physiology, and the fossil evidence for reconstruction." Brain and Language, 7:101-
    126.Lieberman, P., 1982. "Can Chimpanzees Swallow or Talk?", a reply to Falk." American
    Anthropologist 84:148-152.
    Chapin, C. Tseng, C.Y. and P. Lieberman, 1982. "Short-term Release Cues for Stop Consonant
    Place of Articulation in Child Speech." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 71:179-
    186.Ryalls, J.H. and P. Lieberman, 1982. "Fundamental Frequency and Vowel Perception."
    Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 72:1631-1633.Lieberman, P., Katz, W., Jongman,
    A, Zimmerman, R. and M. Miller, 1985. Measures of the sentence intonation of read and
    spontaneous speech in American English." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America,
    77:649-657.Mack, M. and P. Lieberman, 1985. "Acoustic analysis of words produced by a child
    from 46 to 149 weeks." Journal of Child Language.12:527-550
    Lieberman, P., Chatillon, M., Schupack, H. and R.H. Meskill, 1985. "Phonetic speech
    perception deficits in dyslexia." Journal of Speech and Hearing Research 28:480-
    486.Lieberman, P., 1985. "On the Evolution of Human Syntactic Ability: It's Pre-adaptive
    Bases-Motor Control and Speech." Journal of Human Evolution. 14:657-668.Lieberman, P.
    1986. On Bickerton's Review of the Biology and Evolution of Language. American
    Anthropologist. 88:701-703.Lieberman, P. 1986. Some Aspects of Dimorphism and Human
    Speech, Human Evolution 1:67-75. Reprinted in M. Pickford and B. Chiarelli (eds.), Sexual
    Dimorphism in Living and Fossil Primates. Firenze: (FI) Sedicesimo, 1986.Lieberman, P., 1986.
    "Alice in declinationland-A reply to Johan't Hart." Journal of the Acoustical Society of
    America.Lieberman, P., 1987. "A reply to Jacques Mehler's 'Review of the The Biology and
    Evolution of Language'." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 80:15321-1522.Sereno,
    J.A. and P. Lieberman, 1987. "Developmental aspects of lingual coarticulation." Journal of
    Phonetics. 15:247-257.Sereno, J.A., Baum S.R., Marean, G.C. and P. Lieberman, 1987.
    "Acoustic analyses and perceptual data on anticipatory labial coarticulation in adults and
    children." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 81:512-519.Lieberman, P., 1988. "On
    Human Speech, Syntax and Language." Human Evolution. 3:3-18.Lieberman, P., 1989.
    "Comment on Gardner and Gardner-Feedforward vs. feedbackward: An ethological alternative to
    the law of effect." Behavioral and Brain Sciences.Lieberman, P., Freidman, J. and L.S. Feldman
    1990. "Syntax comprehension deficits in Parkinson's disease." The Journal of Nervous and
    Mental Disease. 178: 360-365.Lieberman, P., J. T. Laitman, J. Reidenberg, P. Gannon, and K.
    Landahl. 1990. "Folk Physiology and Talking Hyoid Bones -- A reply to John Marshall and
    Arensberg." Nature. 342:486-487.Lieberman, P. 1991. "Preadaptation, natural selection and
    function." Language & Communication, 11: pp. 63-65.Lieberman, P. 1992. "On Neanderthal
    Speech and Neanderthal Extinction." Current Anthropology, 33:409-410.Lieberman, P., Kako,
    E.T., Friedman, J., Tajchman, G., Feldman, L.S., and E.B. Jimenez. 1992. "Speech production,
    syntax comprehension, and cognitive deficits in Parkinson's disease." Brain and Language, 43:
    169-189.Lieberman, P. 1992. "Could an autonomous syntax module have evolved?" Brain and
    Language 43: 768-774.
    Lieberman, P., Laitman, J.T., Reidenberg, J.S., and P. Gannon. 1992. The anatomy, physiology,
    acoustics and perception of speech: Essential elements in analysis of the evolution of human
    speech. Journal of Human Evolution. 23:447-467.
    Lieberman, P. 1993. "Old stale wine in an old bottle--Comments on R. Burling, Primate calls,
    human language and nonverbal communication, Current Anthropology.Lieberman, P. 1993.
    "The Kebara KMH-2 Hyoid and Neanderthal Speech." Current Anthropology.Lieberman, P., B.
    G. Kanki, A. Protopapas, E. Reed and J. W. Youngs. 1994. "Cognitive defects at altitude."
    Nature. 372:325.Lieberman, P. 1994. "Human language and human uniqueness." Language and
    Communication. 14:87-95.Lieberman, P. 1994. "Are there any purely linguistic deficits?"
    Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases. 182:494.Lieberman, P. 1994. "Hyoid bone position
    and speech: Reply to Arensburg et al. (1990)." American Journal of Physical Anthropology.
    94:275-278.Lieberman, P. 1994. "Comment on: Signs of the origin of syntax," Current
    Anthropology
    Seebach, B.S., Intractor, N., Lieberman, P. and Cooper, L.N. 1994. "A model of prenatal
    acquisition of speech parameters." Proceedings of National Academy of Sciences, USA. 94:7473-
    7476.Lieberman, P. 1994. "Functional tongues and Neanderthal vocal tract reconstruction: A
    reply to Houghton (1993)." American Journal of Physical Anthropology 95: 443-
    452.Lieberman, P. 1995. "Manual versus speech motor control and the evolution of language."
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences.¯
    Lieberman, P., B. G. Kanki, A. Protopapas, E. Reed and J. W. Youngs. 1994. Cognitive defects
    at altitude. Nature. 372:325.
    Lieberman, P., B. G. Kanki, A. Protopapas, 1995. "Speech production and cognitive decrements
    on Mount Everest." Aviation, Space and Environmental Medicine. 66:857-864.
    Lieberman, P. 1996. On Neanderthal speech and human evolution. Behavioral and Brain
    Sciences 19:156-157.
    Lieberman, P. 1996. Neuroanatomical structures and segregated circuits. Behavioral and Brain
    Sciences 19:641
    Lieberman, P. 1996. Universal grammar and critical periods: a most amusing paradox.
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:735
    Friedman, J. H., Lieberman, P. Epstein, M., Cullen, K. Sanes, J. N., Lindquist, M. D. and
    Daamen, M. (1996) Gamma knife Pallidotomy in advanced Parkinson's Disease. Annals of
    Neurology. 39:535-538.
    Protopappas, A. and P. Lieberman (1997) Fundamental frequency of phonation and perceived
    emotional stress. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 101:267-277.
    Pickett, E. R., Kuniholm, Protopapas, A, Friedman, J. and Lieberman, P. (1998) Selective speech
    motor, syntax and cognitive deficits associated with bilateral damage to the head of the caudate
    nucleus and the putamen. A single case study. Neuropsychologia 36:173-188.
    Lieberman, P. (1998) Let barking dogs sleep: Commentary on MacNeilage Brain and Behavioral
    Sciences 21:520-521.
    Lieberman, P. 1999. Silver-Tongued Neanderthals? Science 283:175.
    Lieberman, P. (2001) Summary of "Human language and our reptilian brain: The subcortical
    bases of speech, syntax, and thought," Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 44:32-51.
    Cymerman A., P. Lieberman, J. Hochstadt, P. B. Rock, G. E. Butterfield, and L. Moore. 2002.
    Speech motor control and the development of acute mountain sickness. Aviation, Space and
    Environmental Medicine. 73: 766-772.
    Lieberman, P. 2002. On the nature and evolution of the neural bases of human language.
    Yearbook of Physical Anthropology 45:36-62
    Lieberman, P., A. Morey, J. Hochstadt, M. Larson, and S. Mather. 2005. Mount Everest: A
    space-analog for speech monitoring of cognitive deficits and stress. Aviation, Space and
    environmental Medicine.76:198-207.
    Lieberman, P. 2005. review of From hand to mouth:The origins of language." Michael C.
    Corballis (Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2002)Annals of Biology
    Lieberman, P. 2005. The pied piper of Cambridge. The Linguistic Review 2:223-235.
    Lieberman, P. 2005. Foreword to, L. Polich, The emergence of the deaf community in Nicaragua.
    Wahington D.C.: Gallaudet University Press. (pp. vii-x)
    Lieberman, P. 2006. Limits on tongue deformation – Diana monkey formants and the impossible
    vocal tract shapes proposed by Riede et al. (2005)Journal of Human Evolution.50:219-221.
    Lieberman, P. in press. Review of Evolution of Communication Systems: A Comparative
    Approach, Eds. Kimbrough,D.O.and Griebel, U. , Cambridge Mass.: M. I. T. Press. (2004).
    Quarterly Review of Biology.
    Lieberman, P. 2007. Current views on Neanderthal speech capabilities: A reply to Boe et al.,
    (2002). Journal of Phonetics.36:
    Hochstadt, J., H. Nakano, P. Lieberman and J. Friedman. 2006. The roles of sequencing and
    verbal working memory in sentence comprehension deficits in Parkinson’s disease. Brain and
    Language. 97:243-257
    Lieberman, P. 2007. Review of Steven Pinker, The stuff of thought, New York: Viking, New
    Scientist, 6 October 2007, p. 57.
    Lieberman, P. 2007. The evolution of human speech; Its Anatomical and neural bases.Current
    Anthropology. 48:39-66.
    Lieberman, P. 2008.Old-time linguistic theories. Cortex 24:431-435
    Lieberman, P. and R. McCarthy . 2007, Tracking the Evolution of Language and Speech,
    Expedition: 49:15-20.
    Lieberman, P. 2007, Creation of a Neanderthal language and dialog, for the Discovery Channel
    production- Cavemen
    Lieberman, P. 2007. Reply to Jackendoff, The linguistic Review
    Lieberman, P. 2007, Reply to Boe and colleagues, Journal of Phonetics. . 35:552-563.
    Lieberman, P. in press, The Basal Ganglia and Language, Cambridge Encyclopedia of the
    Language Sciences, Editor Patrick Hogan, New York Cambridge University Press
    Lieberman, P. 2008 Old-time linguistic theories. Cortex. 44:218-226.
    Lieberman, P. 2008. Cortical-striatal-cortical neural circuits, reiteration, and the “Narrow Faculty
    of Language”: Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 31:527-528.
    Lieberman, P. 2008. Extended Review - On the neural bases and evolution of free will:
    reflections on:Freedom and Neurobiology: Reflections on Free Will, Language, and political
    Power. By John R. Searle, In The European Legacy: Toward New Paradigms, Journal of
    ISSEI.13:343-346.
    Lieberman, P. 2008. A wild 50,000 year ride. In Hot Pursuit of Language in Prehistory: Essays
    in the four fields of anthropology in honor of Harold Crane Fleming. Ed. J. D.
    Bengston.Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company.
    Lieberman, P. in press. Our creative capacity, in what manner is it unique, and who had it?
    Proceedings of the Morris Symposium on the evolution of language.
    Lieberman, P. in press. Extended Review of S. Mithen (2005) The Singing Neanderthal and A.
    Patel, (2008) Music, Language, and the Brain. In Language
    Lieberman, P. in press. Review of M.Tomasello (2008) Origins of human communication.In
    American Journal of Physical Anthropology.
    Lieberman, P. in press. Review of Kevin Timpe. Free Will: Sourcehood and Its Alternatives.
    Continuum Studies in Philosophy (London: Continuum, 2008). In The European Legacy:
    Toward New Paradigms, Journal of ISSEI.
    Kugler, S. L, Bali, B., Lieberman, P., Strug, L., Gagnon, B, Murphy, P. L., Clarke, T.,
    Greenberg, D. and Pal, D. K. in press. An autosomal dominant genetically heterogeneous
    variant of rolandic epilepsy and speech disorder. Epilepsia,
    D. NON-REFEREED JOURNAL ARTICLES.
    Lieberman, P. and S.B. Michaels 1963. On the discrimination of missing pitch pulses.
    Proceedings of the Speech Communication Seminar, Stockholm: Royal Institute of Technology.
    Prinzo, O.V., P. Lieberman and E. Pickett. 1998. An acoustic analysis of ATC communication.
    DOT/FAA/AM-98/20. U.S, Department of Transportation. Federal Aviation Administration.
    Springfield VA:National technical Information Service.
    Smith, W.R. and P. Lieberman, 1964. "Studies in pathological speech production." Air Force
    Cambridge Research Laboratories, AFCRL PP. 64-379.
    Lieberman, P., 1972. "On the evolution of human language." Plenary paper Proc. of VIIth
    International Congress of Phonetic Science. Montreal, 1971. pp. 258-275. The Hague: Mouton
    and Company.
    Lieberman, P., 1983. "On the Nature and Evolution of the Biological Bases of Language." in
    Proceedings of the Third Transdisciplinary Symposium of Glossogenetics, J. Laitman and J.
    Wind, (eds.).
    Lieberman, P., 1984. Invention of a Neanderthal language and speech for the film Iceman, Fred
    Schipisi, Director; Huron Productions, Culver City, California.
    Lieberman, P., 1988. "Voice in the wilderness: How humans acquired the power of speech." The
    Sciences, 28(4):pp. 22-29.
    Lieberman, P. 1991. " On the evolution of modern humans and human language." New York
    Review of Books, 38: 53.
    Lieberman, P. (1997) Peak Capacity, The Sciences, 37:22-27
    Cymerman A., P. Lieberman, J. Hochstadt, P. B. Rock, G. E. Butterfield, and L. Moore. 1999.
    Speech motor control and the development of acute mountain sickness. U. S. Army Research
    Institute of Environmental Medicine, Technical report No. T99-5, February 1999 AD A360764,
    Alexandria Va: Defense Technical Information Center
    E. BOOK REVIEWS
    Lieberman, P., 1983. "Review of Quest for Fire." American Anthropologist.Lieberman, P., 1983.
    "Review of The Clever Hans Phenomenon: Communication with People. T.A. Sebeok and R.
    Rosenthal (eds.)." American Journal of Physical Anthropology.
    Lieberman, P., 1992. "Review of the The origins of Language -- an educational film." American
    AnthropologistLieberman, P. 1993. Review of Language and Species. American
    Anthropologist.Lieberman, P. 1993. Ape Language Research and the Evolution of Language.
    (review of Aping Language by Joel Wallman, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992.
    191 pp.) Current Anthropology 34:327-328.
    Lieberman, P. 1996. Review of Tools, Language, and Cognition in Human Evolution. Eds.K.R.
    Gibson and T.Ingold, New York:Cambridge University Press, 1995. Journal of Human Biology.
    Lieberman, P. 1999. Review of Human evolution, language and mind. W. Noble and I.
    Davidson. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Anthropological Linguistics, 41:549-552.
    Lieberman, P. 2000. Review of The origins of complex language: An enquiry into the
    evolutionary beginnings of sentences, syllables and truth. A. Carstairs-McCarthy. Oxford:
    Oxford University Press. American Anthropologist102:21-22.
    Lieberman, P. 2003. Review of The evolutionary emergence of language: social functions and
    the origins of linguistic form. C. Knight, M. Studdert-Kennedy and J. R. Hurford eds,
    Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Journal of Linguistics 39:1-7
    Lieberman, P., A. Morey, J. Hochstadt, M. Larson, and S. Mather. 2005. Mount Everest: A
    space-analog for speech monitoring of cognitive deficits and stress. Aviation, Space and
    environmental Medicine.76:198-207.
    Lieberman, P. 2005. review of From hand to mouth:The origins of language." Michael C.
    Corballis (Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2002) Annals of Biology
    Lieberman, P.2007. Review of Steven Pinker, The stuff of thought, New York: Viking by, New
    Scientist, 6 October 2007, p. 57.
    F. ABSTRACTS NOT PUBLISHED AS REVIEWED PAPERS:
    Lieberman, P. Ryalls, J.H. and S. Rabson, 1982. "On the Early Imitation of Intonation and
    Vowels." ¯7th Annual Boston University Conference of Language Development Meeting
    Handbook, p. 34.Lieberman, P. and C-Y Tseng. 1994. Subcortical pathways essential for
    speech, language and cognition: Implications for hominid evolution. American Journal of
    Physical Anthropology, Suppl. 16, 93:130.
    Lieberman, D. E., R. C. McCarthy, K. Hiiemse, P. Lieberman and J. B. Palmer. (1998) New
    estimates of fossil hominid vocal tract dimensions. Paleoanthropology Society Meeting,Seattle
    WA, March) In Journal of Human Evolution 34:A12-13
    G. INVITED LECTURES AFTER 1978.February, 1978 - Primate Communication: New Data,
    Washington, DC, meeting of American Association for the Advancement of Science.April, 1978
    - Evolution of Language, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, Illinois.June, 1978 - Vowel
    development in infants, N.I.H. Conference on speech and language development. Bethesda,
    MD.October, 1978 - Primate Communication and the Evolution of Human Language, Duke
    University, North Carolina.March, 1979 - Evolution of Speech, International Symposium on
    Speech, Edinburgh, Scotland.August, 1979 - Invited Faculty for first international convening on
    the Linguistic Institute of the Linguistics Society of America, Salzburg, Austria. October, 1979 -
    Development of Speech, Indiana University conference of sensory development of
    infants.November, 1979 - Physiology of Vocal Measurements of Stress, Meeting of Academy for
    the Forensic Application of Communication Sciences.April, 1981 - On the Evolution of Human
    Speech. University of California at Berkeley, University of California at DavisMarch 29, 1982 -
    On the Evolution of Human Speech, University of Nevada, Reno.April 1, 1982 - On the
    Evolution of Human Speech, Wellesley College, Wellesley .Mass.August 26, 1983 -"Recent
    studies on the evolution of language, International Congress Anthropological and Ethnological
    Sciences, Vancouver, BC, Canada.April 3, 1984 - On the Evolution of Human Language,
    University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC.November 17, 1984 - The Biology and
    Evolution of Language, Brown Learning Community.May 22, 1985 - On the Evolution of
    Language, Aphasia Research Unit, Boston Veteran's Administration Hospital.June 25, 1985 -
    Seminar on the Acoustic Analysis of Speech. Summer Institute of the Macarthur Foundation
    Network on the Study of the Transition from Infancy into Childhood. Wintergreen, VA.August
    11-17, 1985 - Discussant, Conference on universals of language, Max-Planck Institit fur
    Psycholinguistik. Nijmegen, Holland.September 16, 1985 - The Biology and Evolution of
    Language, Neuropsychology Colloquium, Providence Veteran's Administration Hospital.October
    28, 1985 - On the evolution of the neural substrate for syntax. Sloan Cognitive Science
    Colloquium, University of Pennsylvania.October 29, 1985 - On the Evolution of Human
    Language" Psychology Colloquium, University of Pennsylvania - "The Biology and Evolution of
    Language.November 13 & 14, 1985 - "The Biology and Evolution of Language" and "The
    Expression of Emotion". NIH Poolesville Laboratories.November 22, 1985 - Organizer and
    speaker - Symposium on the Evolution of Human Speech and Language. ASHLA convention,
    Washington, DC.November 24 - December 28, 1985 - Lecture and seminar series in Italy on
    "The Biology and Evolution of Language", organized by the Instituto di Anthropologia,
    University of Florence (in Florence, Pisa and Parma, Italy).February 2, 1986 - Developmental
    Physiology of Speech Production. Symposium on Developmental Biology, Meeting of the
    Association for Research on Otolaryngology.February 21, 1986 - On the evolution of human
    language. University of Connecticut.April, 1986 - The Biology and Evolution of Language;
    Harvard University Cognitive Science Society.April 17, 1986 - On the evolution of language.
    Graduate Center of the City University of New York.May 17, 1986 - Speech deficits in dyslexia
    - a case against a Chomsyian 'language organ'. Bell Lecture of the Massachusetts General
    Hospital.June 25, 1986 - Seminar on the acoustic measurement of task-induced stress in young
    children. Summer Institute of the Macarthur Foundation Network on the Study of the Transition
    from Infancy into Childhood, Chatham, Mass.October 16, 1986 - "Some biological constraints
    on universal grammar and learnability." Conference on the Teachability of Language, The
    University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas.October 24, 1986 - "On the evolution of intelligence
    and language." The University of Chicago - Chicago Linguistic Society.October 26, 1986 - "The
    discovery of matched neural mechanisms for speech perception." Plenary paper Conference on
    Computers and Language Teaching, University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign.November 22,
    1986 - "The vocal expression of affect" John and Caroline T. Macarthur Foundation Conference
    on the Development of Personality.March 26, 1987 - "The origins of some aspects of human
    language and cognition." Symposium on the Origins and Dispersals of Modern Humans:
    Behavioral and Biological Perspectives, Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, England.December
    10 & 11, 1987. - On the evolution of language, thought and moral-sense. University of
    Delaware.November 18 - 22, 1987 - "Lectures on (1) the Evolution of Language, thought and
    moral-sense, and (2) The expression of emotion. Universite de Geneve, Switzerland.February 27,
    1988. - Thinking and Talking. Centennial Celebration of the University Museum, University of
    Pennsylvania.October 26, 1988. - On the evolutionary biology of speech and syntax. Department
    of Psychology, Harvard University.November 17, 1988. - How children do not acquire language.
    Department of Linguistics, University of Chicago.March 21, 1989. - The evolution of language.
    Plenary talk Eastern Anthropological Association, Montreal, Quebec.April 5, 1989 - On the
    evolution and biological bases of speech and syntax. University of Southern California, Los
    Angeles, CA.April 8, 1989 - The selective advantages of speech and syntax. Annual meeting of
    the American Association of Physical Anthropologists, San Diego, CA.April 22, 1989 -
    Mechanisms for speech and syntax, Neurology Rounds Rhode Island Hospital.August 23, 1989 -
    The Evolution of Human Language. Public Lecture - Santa Fe Institute, Santa Fe, NM. August
    21-28, 1989. One of ten invited participants -- conference on the evolution of complex systems.
    Santa Fe Institute.November 9, 1989 - The Evolution of Speech and Syntax. Cognitive Science
    colloquium sponsored by Hampshire College and the University of Massachusetts, Amherst,
    MA.February, 28 1990 - The Neurophysiology of Talking and Thinking. Institute of Animal
    Behavior, Rutgers University. NJ.March 16-24, 1990 - Rule governed processes and relevant
    brain mechanisms -- speech and tool making. Wenner-Grenn Foundation for Anthropological
    Research Conference of "Tools, Language and Intelligence: Evolutionary Implications."
    Cascals, Portugal.November 29, 1990 - Brain Mechanisms for Speech and Syntax, Queens
    University, Kingston Ontario, November 29, 1990.December 10-14, 1990. - The Nijmegen
    Lectures, Max Planck InstitIt fur Psycholinguistik, Nijmegen Holland:Lecture 1 -
    December 10: The evolution of speech, thought and selfless behavior.Lecture 2 -
    December 11: Darwinian evolutionary mechanisms and evolution of the modern human
    rain.Lecture 3 - December 12: A thoroughly modern human brain -speech and
    syntax.Seminar 1 - December 11: Speech and Syntax deficits of Parkinson's disease:
    The role of the basal ganglia in speech, syntax, and abstract thoughts.Seminar 2 -
    December 12: Brain circuits versus modular organs.Seminar 3 - December 13:
    The brain's dictionary.Seminar 4 - December 13: How children might acquire
    language.January 14-20, 1991 - Three public lectures on the evolution of modern humans and
    human language. -- "Distinguished Lectureship" talks, Academia Sinica, National Science
    Council, Taipei.March 11 1991 - The Evolution of Human Speech, Thought and Selfless
    Behavior. "Barbara Gordon Memorial Lecture," Florida International University March 25,
    1991 - The origins and evolution of language. conference en Anthropologie, Universite de
    Montreal. Montreal, Quebec.April 12, 1991 - Uniquely human: The evolution of speech, thought
    and selfless behavior. Mary Washington College, Fredericksburg, VA.May 23, 1991. On the
    Evolution of Human Speech, Thought, and Selfless Behavior, International Conference on
    Genetics, Linguistics, and Archaeology, Centro Fiorentino di Storia E Filosofia della Scienza,
    Firenze, Italia.October 24, 1991 - Uniquely human: The evolution of speech, thought, and
    selfless behavior. Johnson Memorial Lecture, The Ohio State University.December 5, 1991 -
    Speech, symbolic activity, and the Neanderthal question. Symposium on evolution of symbolic
    activity. Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association, San Francisco, CA.
    January 20-23, 1992 - On the neural bases of human language. Conference on Biological and
    cultural aspects of language development. Universitat Bielefeld. Zentrum fur interdisziplinare
    Forschung. Bielefeld, Germany.February 13, 1992 - On the neurophysiology of speech and
    syntax. Grand Rounds Butler Hospital, Providence, RIFebruary 27, 1992 - The neurophysiology
    of speech, syntax and logic. Bloefield Memorial Lecture, University of Washington, Seattle,
    Washington.March 1, 1992 - The neural bases of speech and syntax. Annual meeting of the
    American Association for Applied Linguistics, Seattle, WA.March 12, 1992 - "The brain bases
    of speech, syntax, and thinking: New data from the study of Parkinson's Disease." Department
    of Anthropology, Harvard University, Boston, MA.March, 17, 1992 - Speech production, syntax
    and thinking. 58th Stated Meeting of the Associates of the Neursciences Research Program.
    Rockefeller University, New York. (Invited Guest of the Institute for the meeting, March 15-
    18.)May 4-8, 1992 - Workshop on Cooperation and competition in evolutionary processes.
    Swedish Council for Planning and Coordination of Research (FRN) Abiska, Sweden.November
    13, 1992 - "Speech production and the neural bases of human linguistic and cognitive ability
    with reference to moral sense." Annual meeting of Northeastern Political Science Association,
    Providence, RI.April 4, 1993 - "New Insights On Brain Organization." Academia Sinica, Taipei,
    Taiwan..February 17, 1994. On the evolution of intelligence and altruism. Brown Learning
    Community.March 20, 1994. Gallery talk. Museum of the Rhode Island School of Design.
    Providence.May 26, 1994, Brain mechanisms implicated in motor control and cognition.
    Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan.December 30, 1994. What Mount Everest does to your brain:
    Anoxic deficits in speech and thinking. Appalachian Mountain Club, Pinkham Notch, New
    Hampshire.March, 1995, Neurological Grand Rounds, Rhode Island Hospital.
    March, 1995, with Marcia R. Lieberman, "The Buddhist Wall-Paintings of Mustang." Tibet
    House, New York.
    June, 1995. The Biological Bases of Human Language," IFOTT, University of Amsterdam, NL
    November 1995, with Marcia R. Lieberman, "Bon and Sherpa Ritualsm" Tibet House, New
    York.
    December 1995, with Marcia R. Lieberman, "Tibet and Holy Mt. Kailash," Appalachian
    Mountain Club, Pinkham Notch, New Hampshire.
    April 1997. Subcortical brain mechanisms implicated in language and cognition, Department of
    Brain and Cognitive Science, M I T --
    October 1997, M I T - Experiments in nature revealing subcortical regulation of speech and
    syntax. Harvard Medical School program in Speech and Hearing Science.
    April 1998, On the functional language system of the human brain. 2nd International Conference
    on the Evolution of Language. London, UK.
    May 1998. Language Evolution and Innateness. The Mind, Brain and Language Conference.
    University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
    April 1999. Keynote address. Conference on the vocal expression of emotion. Emory University,
    Atlanta. GA.
    May 1999. "Our reptilian brain on Everest". Museum of Science, Phoenix, Arizona
    October 1999. "Human language and the reptilian brain: On the subcortical bases of speech,
    syntax, and thought". "Big Problems" Lecture Series of the Franke Institute for the Humanities of
    the University of Chicago, Chicago, Ilinois
    December 1999. Neanderthal speech. Department of Anthropology, University College, London,
    UK.
    December 1999. "Human language and our reptilian brain: the subcortical bases of speech,
    syntax, and thought," opening lecture of the Conference on Evolution of the BerlinBrandenburgische
    Akadamie der Wissenshaften, Berlin, Germany
    March 2000. "Neanderthal speech," LOH Symposium, University of California at San Diego and
    Salk Institute.
    May 2000. "Semeosis, speech and the evolution of the human brain." The Origins of Semeosis,
    International Center for Semeotic and Cognitive Studies, San Marino, May 19-21.
    May, 2000. Evolution of speech -- radio talk solicited and broadcast in the United Kingdom by
    BBC Radio 4
    March, 2000. with Marcia R. Lieberman. introductory lecture and slide presentation at Jane
    Dwyer Memorial Lecture of Geshe Ngawang Jangchup at the Haffenreffer Museum of
    Anthropology.
    November 2, 2000. with Marcia R. Lieberman. "Tibetan Buddhist Paintings and People of the
    Indian Himalaya," The 101 Forum, Brown University
    March 27, 2002. Motor control and the evolution of language, Fourth International Conference
    on the Evolution of Language, Harvard University.
    October 8, 2003. On the neural bases of human language. Brown University Graduate
    Neuroscience Colloquium Series.
    November 21, 2003. Basal ganglia and a "universal grammar" for action, language and
    cognition. MECA VI -Cognition and Action. Max Planck Institute for Psychological research,
    Munich, Germany
    December 6, 2003. Motor control, memory and the evolution of human linguistic and cognitive
    ability. Symposium - Evolution of Language Reappraised. Primate Research Center (PRI) Kyoto
    University, Japan.
    March 17, 2004. Subcortical neural circuits and human evolution. Symposium on new directions
    in Physical Anthropology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst. MA.
    April 20, 2004. Motor control, the FOXP2 language gene and Mount Everest: Insights on the
    evolution of human linguistic and cognitive ability. Dept of Anthropology, University of
    Connecticut.
    May 29, 2004. Chomsky's "Universal Grammar and the FOXP2 gene." Annual meeting of the
    Society for Behavior Analysis, Boston Mass.
    August 20, 2004 - via telephone and Powerpoint - Voice Stress Analysis, NTSB and NASA.
    January 10-11, 2005 Invited Speaker, Society of French Clinical Neurology, Paris,France
    February 3, 2005 Filming by Canadian Broadcasting Company on NSBRI sponsored research
    (for broadcast in 2006)
    February 17-19, 2005 Workshop on Evolution of Cognition, University of Delaware, Delaware
    April 18-20, 2005 Invited speaker, Fundacion Ramon Areces, Integrative Symposium:
    Integrative Approaches to Human Health and
    Evolution, Madrid, Spain
    June 13-15, 2005 Encoding/Decoding Workshop, Santa-Fee Institute,
    New Mexico
    October 14-16, 2005 Invited Speaker, Alice V. and David H. Morris Symposium on the
    Evolution of Language, Stony Brook University, New York
    November 21, 2005 Invited Speaker, Mary Washington University, Virginia
    March 15, 2006…Invited Speaker. “Mount Everest – A Space Analog”. Grand Rounds, Rhode
    Island Hospital, Providence, RI
    March 17, 2006 Invited Speaker, “FOXP2 and the evolution of language”. McGill University,
    Montreal, Canada.
    July 18, 2006- Invited Speaker, “Hypoxic insult to the brain deriving from extreme altitude,”.
    Defense Institute of Physiology and Allied Sciences, New Delhi, India.
    October 7, 2006.-Invited Speaker, “Neanderthal speech and language,”. Society for
    Understanding Humans. University of California, San Diego.
    June 6, 2007, Invited speaker; “Voice monitoring cognitive deficits on a space-analog - Mount
    Everest.” Eighth International Conference on Naturalistic Decision Making, , Asilomar CA
    February 2, 2008.Voice monitoring radiation induced cognitive deficits and performance
    decrements from cognitive load. NASA Human Research Program Investigators' Workshop,
    League City, Texas,
    April 22, 2008. Therapsids and Us -- Inferences on the evolution of the neural bases of human
    language and cognition. George Washington University, Washington D.C.,.
    October 24, 2008. With Marcia R. Lieberman: Southeast Asia- Beyond Touristland. Wheaton
    College, Norwood Massachusetts,.
    H. NUMEROUS PAPERS READ OVER MANY YEARS.
    I. SELECTED PHOTOGRAPHIC EXHIBITIONS AND PUBLICATIONS
    SELECTED SOLO SHOWS:
    1983 - Jan: Bertha Urdang Gallery, 23 East 74th St, New York
    May: Providence Athenaeum, 251 Benefit St.
    July-Aug: American Gallery, Bern, Switzerland
    Sept: Gallery 401, 401 Elmgrove Ave., Providence
    Dec : Bertha Urdang Gallery, 23 East 74th St, New York
    1984 - June: Woods-Gerry Gallery of the Rhode Island School of Design
    l986 - April: Silver-Bullet Gallery, Providence
    June: Brouha Gallery, Providence
    Nov: Bertha Urdang Gallery, 23 East 74th St, New York
    1988 - Oct: Bannister Gallery, Rhode Island College, Providence
    1989 - March: Bertha Urdang Gallery, 23 East 74th St, New York C
    1991 - Dec: Bertha Urdang Gallery, 23 East 74th St, New York City
    1992 - Nov: Gallery 401, 401 Elmgrove Ave., Providence
    1994 - Feb: Providence Art Club.
    1994 - Dec 31: "The Sherpa Festival of Dumji." Appalachian Mountain
    Club, Pinkham Notch, New Hampshire.
    1995 - March 29: (with lecture by M. R. Lieberman) Tibet House,New York. "The wall
    paintings of Mustang, Nepal"
    1995 - Dec 30, Dec 31: "Holy Mount Kailash" and "Swiss Berghotels", Appalachian
    Mountain Club, Pinkham Notch, New Hampshire.
    1996 - Feb. 25 to March 8. Dodge House Gallery of Providence Art Club. The
    Tibetan Himalayan World.
    1996 - June 15 to July 7: Galerie Op Steker, Amsterdam
    1996 - November 17: (with lecture by M. R. Lieberman) Tibetan Art. Jacques Marchais
    Museum of Tibetan Art, Staten Island, NY
    1996 - Dec 31: The Chang-Tang Plateau of Tibet, Appalachian Mountain
    Club, Pinkham Notch, New Hampshire.
    1998 - Nov 15 to Dec 4. Dodge House Gallery of Providence Art Club.
    From Tibet to Benefit Street: Recent Photographs
    1999 - December. Visions and Voices of Tibet. Haffenreffer Museum of
    Anthropology, Brown University.
    SELECTED GROUP SHOWS
    Carl Siembab Gallery, Boston, Massachusetts
    De Cordova Museum, Lincoln, Massachusetts
    Invitational: a traveling show curated by Bertha Urdang: at London Regional Art Gallery,
    London, Ontario; Depree ArtCenter, Holland, Michigan; and other public galleries.
    1986-1988 - International Traveling Invitational Show. "The Animal in Photography, 1843
    - 1985." Assembled by the
    Photographer's Gallery, London, U. K.
    1994. "Contemporary Art in Rhode Island" Museum of the Rhode Island School of Design. One
    of 25 fine artists (one of fi ve photographers) Three my five prints were selected for the
    Museum's permanent collection.
    SELECTED PHOTOGRAPHIC PUBLICATIONS:
    Walking Switzerland: The Swiss Way. Seattle: The Mountaineers (1987)
    The United States of the Alps. New York: Alpine Tourist Commission (1991)
    The Sherpas of Nepal (photographic essay), Trilogy.
    January/February, 1992, pp. 24-29.
    Carpet-children of Nepal, The Rhode Islander, May 15, 1994, 18-19
    United Nations Development Commission Report, 1997 and 2000
    The Alpine Parks of France and Northwestern Italy. (1994) Seattle: The Mountaineers
    Walking Switzerland: The Swiss Way, 2nd edition, (1997) Seattle: The Mountaineers, text by
    Lieberman, M.
    Swiss Mountain Inns (1998) Woodstock, Vt: Countryman Press (A division of W. W. Norton),
    text by Lieberman, M.
    Where the earth meets the sky. In The Oberoi Group Magazine Summer 2001. pp. 1-11.
    Himalayan portraits. In The Oberoi Group Magazine Summer 2006, pp. 50-57.
    Photographs published in The New York Times
    April 5, 1987 -- Emmental farm life
    February 21, 1988 -- Khumbu and Solu Khumbu, Nepal.
    July 3, 1988 -- Climb of the Breithorn, Switzerland.
    August 14, 1988 -- Engadine villages, Switzerland.
    June 11, 1989 -- Berghotels in Switzerland.
    March 17, 1991 -- Suvarov's route through Switzerland.
    July 28, 1991 -- Tumlingtar to Tengboche and Thame, Nepal.
    March 1, 1992 -- Life and landforms in Zanskar and Ladakh, India
    April 5, 1992 -- Bronze age art in Alpes-Maritimes, France.
    April 25, 1993 -- Life and landforms in Dolpo, Nepal.
    June 13, 1993 -- Valgrisenche, Italy.
    April 24, 1994 -- Mustang, Nepal.
    August 28, 1994 -- Queyras and Ubaye, France.
    March 5, 1995 -- Hohturli, Switzerland.
    April 19, 1995 -- Newari Art of Kathmandu.
    November 12, 1995 -- Kathmandu.
    September 1996 -- Holy Mt Kailash, Tibet
    September 1997 -- The Appenzell
    May 1, 1998 -- Inner Dolpo, Nepal
    November 22, 1998, Kerala's Inland Waterways and Havelis of
    Rajistan, India
    June 6, 1999 -- Inland Rhode Island
    June 20, 1999 -- Tour di Monte Rosa
    February 11, 2001 -- Where the earth meets the sky.
    Photographs published in The Boston Sunday Globe
    February 4. 2001 -- A Zermatt High
    June 17, 2001 -- The Surprise of Sicily
    May 12, 2002 -- Ancient route through the Alps is rediscovered.
    CD-ROM: with Marcia R. Lieberman and Lama Ngawang Jorden -- Photographic survey of the
    15th Century Buddhist wall-paintings of the gombas (temples) of Mustang, Nepal Grant from
    the Getty Grant Foundation. The DVD is an archive containing 1,300 images (JPEG plus high
    resolution TIF files), a prayer chant and discussions of Tibetan art and culture. It is also on the
    Brown University website URL http://dl.lib.brown.edu/BuddhistTempleArt
    650 Photographs in the permanent collections of The Brooklyn Museum, New York, The
    Museum of the Rhode Island School of Design, Providence, and The Haffenreffer Museum of
    Anthropology.
    155 Photographs documenting life in the Himalaya in the Tibetan and Himalayan Digital Library
    (THDL) of the University of Virginia - The material on the CDROM of the 15th Century
    Buddhist wall paintings of Mustang is also being placed on this website in a form that can be
    accessed by scholars throughout the world. The Instructions for accessing this collection are as
    follows:
    Listed in Who's Who in American Art
    CULTURAL DOCUMENTATION FOR HAFFENREFFER MUSEUM
    147 archival prints of my photographs documenting Buddhist culture and life in Ladakh India
    and Laos were placed in the permanent collection of the Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology.
    These photographs record the ongoing cultural transition occurring as traditional Buddhist
    agrarian and nomadic cultures encounter outside “modern” influences.
    6. RESEARCH
    The goal of my research over more than three decades has been to understand both the nature
    and the evolution biological bases of the some of the attributes that make us human. A full
    understanding of any aspect of biology must take into account its evolution. As Dobzhanzy
    noted, “Nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution.” That understanding,
    unfortunately, usually does not characterize research in Cognitive Science, Neuroscience, or
    Linguistics.
    Although linguists have focused on syntax being the key to human language, evolutionary
    principles point to talking being a critical element - animals can’t talk. I initially focused on the
    evolution of the human, species-specific, vocal tract. The anatomy of the skull base, mouth,
    pharynx and throat evolved in part to facilitate speech production. But it is apparent that other
    species, even closely related primates, also lack the neural substrate that allows humans to
    flexibly reprogram motor gestures to produce voluntary speech. The papers that my colleagues
    and I published between1968 and 1972) showed that this is the case. Therefore, the speciesspecific
    human vocal tract which increases the risk of choking would have been worse than
    useless without the presence of this neural substrate. This synergy between the evolution of
    anatomy and brains has allowed us to make reasonable inferences about the time-depth of fully
    human speech. If a fossil hominin had a modern vocal tract, s/he most like had a brain that could
    have produced voluntary speech.
    Moreover, we can make the reasonable inference that s/he also would have possessed modern
    cognitive capabilities. Lieberman and McCarthy (2007) proposed that modern speech and
    cognitive capabilities are first apparent in the Upper Paleolithic, some 50,000 years ago when the
    archaeological record suggests that a “cultural revolution” took place. This inference is
    reasonable because speech production is regulated by cortical-striatal-cortical circuits, whose
    subcortical striatal elements also support neural circuits that confer the range of cognitive
    capabilities grouped under the rubric of “executive control.”These capabilities include cognitive
    flexibility – which I see as the key to creativity, working memory, comprehending syntax,
    accessing words from the brain’s “dictionary” (temporal regions of the brain), and solving
    mathematical problems.
    I have proposed that the neural circuits that confer human cognitive ability evolved from ones
    initially adapted for motor control. The mark of this evolutionary process appears to be evident
    in the fact that deficits in speech motor capabilities co-occur with a group of cognitive deficits
    that experimental findings show involve damage to the striatal basal ganglia in these neural
    circuits. Impendent fMRI data from both neurologically intact and compromised subjects support
    this conjecture.
    The practical fruits of this enterprise are techniques that make use of the fact that the basal
    ganglia support neural circuits implicated in cognition as well as motor control. We have used
    speech measures to monitor cognitive deficits arising from Parkinson’s disease, Developmental
    Verbal Apraxia and hypoxia. Working with Dr. David Mandelbaum and his colleagues at R I
    Hospital, we propose to develop and validate a rapid, low-cost procedure for monitoring
    cognitive deficits resulting from concussion, using speech and error-rate measurements from 4-
    minute long repeatable tasks. My previous research shows that these procedures can detect
    cognitive deficits.
    Specific Research Projects
    June 2000- October 30, 2008)."Speech monitoring of stress and cognitive deficits."National
    Space Biomedical Research Institute (NSBRI) – we demonstrated that we could monitor
    cognitive deficits arising from exposure to radiation or hypoxia through speech analysis.
    Ongoing collaboration with Dr. Mandelbaum, Hasbro Children’s Hospital on Developmental
    Verbal Apraxia
    Ongoing collaboration with Dr. Joseph Friedman, Neurohealth, on Parkinson’s Disease
    Ongoing collaboration with Dr. Deb Pal. Mailman School of Public Health of Columbia
    University. on Rolandic epilepsy. We show a syndrome that appears to result from dysfunctional
    basal ganglia - speech motor control and cognitive flexibility are compromised. The gene
    implicated in this condition has been isolated.
    Book Project
    In line with my overriding interest concerning human nature and human evolution, I am working
    on a book aimed at a general audience on the neural bases of free will and their evolution
    I define free will as the ability to choose among alternatives. My basic premise is that this
    capacity derives from neural circuits that initially were adapted for motor control. . The book
    also will discuss the biological bases of morality because morality and free-will are often tied
    together. My claim is that morality does not have a discrete genetic basis. Contrary to the claims
    of Evolutionary Psychology, there is no “moral gene.”
    The evidence that I will discuss includes the findings of current neuroimaging studies,
    neurophysiologic studies of other species and humans that reveal circuits, behavioral studies of
    the consequences of insult to the brain, and the historical record.
    7. SERVICE:Brown University:
    Chairman, Department of Linguistics, 1975-1977. 1981-86. Chairman, Department Cognitive
    and Linguistic Sciences, 1988 - 1991Modern Language Board and Council for Languages and
    Literature, Brown University, 1975-1976.Committee on Honorary Degrees, 1984-
    1986.Chairmen's Meeting Agenda Committee, 1983-1984.Freshman advising, 1976 - 2003
    Professional:
    Program Committee of the Linguistic Society of America, 1974-1976.
    Technical Committee on Speech Communication, Acoustical Society of America, 1965-1972.
    Language editorial review committee, Linguistic Society of America,1978-1981.
    Consultant and site visitor for NSF, NIH and New Zealand Research Council. Dutch NSF
    equivalent, Canada Council, National Transportation Safety Board, New Zealand NSF,
    Netherlands Science Foundation, Belgium, UK, Israel Science Foundation and others
    American Psychological Association Planning Committee for cognitive psychology. 1986.
    Study group for mission of the NIH Institute on Deafness and other Communication Disorders,
    January 1989.
    Editorial Boards: Human Evolution, Linguistic Research, Mother Tongue. MOCA (Society for
    understanding human evolution)
    REFEREE OF SUBMITTED PAPERS, GRANT PROPOSALS, AND BOOKS
    Cortex, Cel,l, Brain and Language, American Journal of Primatology, Journal of Applied
    Physiology, Brain and Behavioral Sciences,Trends in Cognitive Science,NSF, NIH, Chinese
    Academy of Sciences, Springer Verlag, Cambridge University Press
    1995 to present - Board of Directors, Association for the Study of Language in Prehistory.
    1997- to present - La Jolla Group for explaining the origin of humans (LOH)
    Reviewer: Science, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, American Journal of
    Physical Anthropology, General Psychology Review J. Nervous Mental Disease, Brain and
    Language., Neuropsychologia, Cell, American Journal of Primatology, Journal of Applied
    Physiology, Cortex, MIT Press, Springer, Cambridge University Press, Oxford University Press,
    Harvard University Press, LEA, and other publishers and journals.
    Community:
    Consultant on voice analysis and voice analyses for various law enforcement agencies,
    defendants in criminal trials, National Transportation Safety Board, Federal Bureau of
    Investigation, the US Army and other Federal entities.
    Lectures to civic groups on the evolution of language. Slide shows on Buddhist Art with M.
    Lieberman.
    Contributions of photographs for auctions benefiting WSBE, First Unitarian Church, Museum of
    the Rhode Island School of Design, Hands in Outreach, Community Volunteers, PBS and other
    charitable organizations,
    8. Honors
    Fellow: American Association for Advancement of Science
    Fellow: American Psychological Society
    Fellow: American Anthropological Association.
    Associate: Current Anthropology,
    Associate: Brain and Behavioral Science
    1974: Research Award of the American Speech and Hearing Association.
    1984. Guggenheim Fellow
    1985: NATO Visiting Professor, Instituto di Anthropologia, Florence, Italy.
    1986: Guest Editor, of Human Evolution.
    1990: Nijmegen Lecturer, Max Planck Institut fur Psycholinguistik, Nijmegen Holland, (
    aweeklong seriues of lectures) December 10-14, 1990
    1991: Distinguished Lecturer, Institute of Philology of the Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan,
    Republic of China.
    1992: - Leading Edge Speaker, Evergreen College, Evergreen, Washington
    2005: Concluding Invited Speaker, Alice V. and David H. Morris International Symposium on
    the Evolution of Language, Stony Brook University, New York
    9. Sponsored Research:
    N.I.H. research study, Development of Speech in Infants, Grant #5R01HD09197, 1975-1981;
    N.I.H. Grant "Developmental Studies of Speech.
    Grants for study of development of speech perception in infants from John and Caroline
    Macarthur Foundation 1984-1986
    Research contract on forensic voice analysis - U. S. Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of
    Investigation, Forensic Sciences, Order # A107193, 1991-1993.
    Grants NASA (1992-95) for extreme-altitude Research.
    Grant FAA (1995-1996) voice analysis of Air Traffic Controllers.
    Grant FAA (1996-1997) Acoustic measures of hypoxia in pilots
    with Marcia R. Lieberman,"CD-ROM of a photographic survey of Buddhist wall paintings in
    Mustang, Nepal" funded by Getty Grant Program, Los Angeles, CA., Reference Works
    Category, 2000-2004
    Joint Research Project on Voice Analysis for Hypoxic Cognitive Dysfunction -- U. S. Army,
    AIREM, Natick Massachusetts 1997 --
    Grant National Space Biomedical Research Institute. Speech-based monitoring of cognitive and
    linguistic ability, and personality alterations. 2001-2004,
    Current Sponsored Research:
    National Space Biomedical Research Institute: Voice measures of cognition and stress. July
    2004-June 2007.
    SELECTED TV, RADIO, AND PRINT INTERVIEWS:
    Subject of Educational Television Documentaries on the Evolution of Language, filmed at
    Brown University by: TF-1, French National Television, 1981; Mann-Union TV, Japanese
    Television, 1984; RAI, Italian National Television, 1984; Canadian Broadcasting System, 1986;
    2002, PBS, WNET/Thirteen "The Mind" 1987, BBC Science Programme 1987, 1999, 2001;
    Grenada TV (England) -- "Dead Men Talk' (The evolution of modern human beings) 1991.
    Radio interview: March 1993, Canadian Broadcasting System Filming.
    1988. Featured in Special Section on "Archaeology: Transitions in Prehistory" Science
    282:1455-1457.Discovery Channel,Everest Research 1995, 2003,2005; Swedish
    televison,Evolution of language 2007
    September 1993 -- Granada TV documentary, "The Origins of Man." 1995 "Language' - PBS
    (series produced by G. Searchinger), 1997 Discovery Magazine "Hypoxia on Mount Everest."
    1997 DiscoveryMagazine "Voice analysis in Parkinson's Disease."
    1999 Deutsche Welt2000 BBC
    2003- The Lancet-Neurology, Newsdesk Editorial, "Detection of cognitive impairment: the final
    frontier. 2:590-591.
    2004: Featured in Special Section on the Evolution of Language, Science 303:1316-1317.
    2004 BBC
    2004 - A Laboratory known as Everest, article on NSBRI Everest study in The Nation (Nepal)
    May 2, pp. 24-25.
    2004- Documentary on Everest research, Discovery Channel - Canada
    2005 - January 3 Interview on speech perception, Science Magazine
    2006 – Interviews New York Times, Science, various PBS and CBC stations.
    2007. Interviews with Science, Brazil feature article- Veja Magazine (Brazil),Filming by
    Swedish TV on evolution of human language.
    Photography:
    1994 -- "Contemporary Art in Rhode Island," juried exhibition of Museum of Rhode Island
    School of Design (one of 25 artists selected in the Fine Arts Category)
    1999 -- "The Tibetan World: Visions and Voices". Exhibit at the Haffenreffer Museum of
    Anthroplogy, Brown University.
    2002-2003 - 230 prints documenting life in Tibetan Himalayan regions and in Southeast Asia
    selected for archives of the Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology.
    .
    2004- 350 photographs taken over the past twenty years documenting traditional Tibetan life in
    the Himalaya placed in the archives of the Tibetan and Himalayan Digital Library (THDL)of the
    University of Virginia.
    http://THDL.org (path: Collections - Special Collections) They are available in high-resolution
    TIF files to scholars throughout the world. The material on the CDROM of the 15th Century
    Buddhist wall paintings of Mustang is also on this website.
    Listed in Who's Who in America and\or Who in American Science and Technology .and Who's
    Who in the World,at various times 1999.
    Listed in Who's who in American Art since 1987.
    9. TEACHING LAST THREE YEARS:
    Semester 1: CGL 032. The Biology and Evolution of Language
    CGL 124. Laboratory course on Speech Physiology,
    Perception and Acoustics
    Semester 2: CGL 150. Subcortical brain bases of language and
    thought
    2005-2006
    Semester 1: CGL 032. The Biology and Evolution of Language
    CGL 124. Speech Physiology, Perception and Acoustics
    Semester 2: CGL 150. Subcortical brain bases of language and
    thought
    2006-2007.
    Semester 1:
    CGL 124. Laboratory course on Speech Physiology, Perception and
    Acoustics
    CGL 198: Seminar with M Tarr on the Evolution of Perception and Language.
    Semester 2: CGL 150. Subcortical brain bases of language and
    thought
    2007-2008
    Semester 1: CGL 032. The Biology and Evolution of Language
    2008-2009
    Spring:
    CGL 124. Laboratory course on Speech Physiology, Perception and
    Acoustics
    CGL 150. Subcortical brain bases of language and thought.
    Fall: CGL 150. Subcortical brain bases of language and
    thought
    Independent studies: CG 198 and CG 201 2-4 students per semester,
    Honors projects:
    Beverly R. Young
    Sandra Mather – 2006
    Maya Barsky – in pregress
    Recent Graduate Theses Supervised
    Ph.D. Theses underway: Sandra Mather
    Ph.D Thesis directed: W. T. Fitch, completed 1994
    Ph.D Thesis directed: E. R. Pickett, completed 1998
    Ph.D Thesis advisor (with Prof J Vaissiere, Universite de la Sorbonne Nouvelle (Paris III): SooJin
    Chung, completed 2000
    Ph.D Thesis directed: J. Hochstadt, completed 2004
    Supervised research of Morana Alec - graduate exchange student from Bologna-Brown program.
    1998-2000
    10. Prepared December, 2008

  • Brown University - https://vivo.brown.edu/display/plieberm

    Philip Lieberman
    George Hazard Crooker University Professor Emeritus
    Overview
    Philip Lieberman Fred M. Seed Professor of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences

    Professor of Anthropology
    Department of Anthropology
    . Professional Appointments 1957-59 Research Assistant, Research Laboratory of Electronics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1958-62. Lieutenant, United States Air Force: 1962-67 Research Staff, Speech Research Branch, Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratories 1967. Research Staff Member, Haskins Laboratories. Associate Professor, University of Connecticut; Professor, 1969; Acting Head, Department of Linguistics 1973-74 1974. Professor, Brown University
    1975-77, 1981-86. Chairman, Department of Linguistics 1988 - 1991, Chairman, Department Cognitive and Linguistic

Philip Lieberman
Born: October 25, 1934 in Brooklyn, New York, United States
Nationality: American
Contemporary Authors Online. Detroit: Gale, 2002. From Literature Resource Center.
Full Text: COPYRIGHT 2018 Gale, a Cengage Company
Updated:Apr. 18, 2002

Table of Contents

PERSONAL INFORMATION:
Family: Born October 25, 1934, in Brooklyn, NY; son of Harry Israel (a plumber) and Miriam (Mendelson) Lieberman; married Marcia Rubinstein (a writer), June 2, 1957; children: Benjamin, Daniel. Education: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, B.S.E.E. and M.S.E.E., both 1958, Ph.D. (linguistics), 1966. Military/Wartime Service: U.S. Air Force, 1958-62; became first lieutenant. Memberships: Modern Language Association of America, Linguistic Society of America, Acoustical Society of America, American Association of Physical Anthropology, American Anthropological Association, Swiss Alpine Club. Addresses: Home: 141 Elton St., Providence, RI 02906. Office: Brown University, Box E, Providence, RI 02912.

CAREER:
Air Force Communication Research Laboratories, Bedford, MA, research scientist, 1958-67; University of Connecticut, Storrs, associate professor of linguistics and electrical engineering, 1967-70, professor of linguistics, 1970-74; Brown University, Providence, RI, professor of linguistics, beginning 1978. Member of research staff, Haskins Laboratories, 1967-74; guest of Research Laboratory for Electronics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1967-70.

WORKS:
WRITINGS BY THE AUTHOR:
Intonation, Perception, and Language, M.I.T. Press, 1967.
Speech Acoustics and Perception, Bobbs-Merrill, 1970.
The Speech of Primates, Mouton, 1972.
On the Origin of Languages: An Introduction to the Evolution of Human Language, Macmillan, 1975.
Speech Physiology and Acoustic Phonetics, Macmillan, 1977.
The Biology and Evolution of Language, Harvard University Press (Cambridge, MA), 1984.
(With Sheila E. Blumstein) Speech Psychology, Speech Perception, and Acoustic Phonetics, Cambridge University Press (New York), 1988.
Uniquely Human: The Evolution of Speech, Thought, and Selfless Behavior, Harvard University Press (Cambridge, MA), 1991.
Eve Spoke: Human Language and Human Evolution, Norton (New York), 1998.
Human Language and Our Retilian Brain: The Subcortical Bases of Speech, Syntax, and Thought, Harvard University Press (Cambridge, MA), 2000.
Contributor of articles to journals, including Language, Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, American Anthropologist, Brain and Language, and Linguistic Inquiry.

Sidelights
Lieberman told CA: "It's probably comforting for many people to think that human beings, as a class, are unique. The evidence for human uniqueness has, however, been transitory. In the eighteenth century, certain bones were supposed to be present only in human beings; in the nineteenth century, the structure of the human brain was supposed to be unique. Similar bones and similar neural structures were, however, found in apes. The differences which did exist were of degree rather than kind. In recent years the case for human uniqueness seems to be based on language. The problem is that chimpanzees do, in fact, behave in a linguistic mode when they are taught a modified version of American sign language. The counter-argument from advocates of uniqueness is that the chimpanzees are either not really using sign language, or that even if they are, the situation is artificial and they don't exhibit any linguistic behavior when we observe them in the wild.

"I believe that chimpanzees in the state of nature use a linguistic mode of communication and that we will ultimately be able to decode this system. The problem is that chimpanzees are not human beings and the special mechanisms that we know exist in human beings to facilitate the acquisition of human language are probably not appropriate for their language. Research on the biological bases of human language shows that human infants, for example, are equipped to perceive some of the phonetic contrasts that are productive in human speech. The situation is similar for ducklings and duck calls. It is very difficult for humans to hear the distinctions that are meaningful to ducks; we need complex instruments or careful auditory training to differentiate the duck calls that are distinct to ducklings.

"Ultimately I believe that we will find that chimpanzees communicate in a linguistic mode--i.e., by means of an open system that can transmit new information in contrast to the closed communication systems of animals like ducks. I doubt that chimpanzees will have a language that is equivalent in its logical power to human language--they are not, after all, human beings. The difference, however, will be one of degree rather than kind.

"Some of the controversy that has emerged regarding my own work on the evolution of human language is based on the rejection of the theory that linguistic ability is a continuum. My work, for example, indicates that the speech of Neanderthal hominids was less effective than the speech of present day humans. Australopithecines, in turn, were probably closer to present day apes. If linguistic ability is the key to humanness, then the human-nonhuman distinction is not sharp. Thus, people sometimes become emotional in discussing the linguistic abilities of fossil hominids or present-day chimpanzees. The debate really isn't about language but the human-nonhuman distinction.

"The next decade will be interesting. It will be curious, to say the least, to establish ethical standards if the human-nonhuman distinction is a continuum."

Source Citation (MLA 8th Edition)
"Philip Lieberman." Contemporary Authors Online, Gale, 2002. Literature Resource Center, http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/H1000059995/LitRC?u=schlager&sid=LitRC&xid=63ae1e07. Accessed 23 Apr. 2018.

Gale Document Number: GALE|H1000059995

"Philip Lieberman." Contemporary Authors Online, Gale, 2002. Literature Resource Center, http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/H1000059995/LitRC?u=schlager&sid=LitRC&xid=63ae1e07. Accessed 23 Apr. 2018.