Bibliography

Anderson, Stephen R. 2004. Doctor Dolittle’s Delusion:  Animals and the Uniqueness of Human Language.  New Haven: Yale University Press.

Anderson, Stephen R. & David W. Lightfoot. 1999. The human language faculty as an organ. Annual Review of Physiology 62: 697-722.

Baker, Mark C. 2001. The Atoms of Language. New York: Basic Books.

Bauer, Laurie and Peter Trudgill. 1998. Language Myths.  London: Penguin.

Bickerton, Derek. 1983. Creole languages. Scientific American 249(8): 116-122.

Bickerton, Derek. 1990. Language & Species. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Boroditsky, Lera. 2001. Does language shape thought? Mandarin and English speakers‘ conceptions of time. Cognitive Psychology 43: 1-22.

Carstairs-McCarthy, Andrew. 2000. Origins of language. In Aronoff, Mark and Rees-Miller, Janie (eds.), The Handbook of Linguistics, 1-18. Oxford: Blackwell.

Chomsky, Noam. 1988. Language and Politics.  (Carlos P. Otero, ed.) Montreal: Black Rose Books.

Colapinto, John. 2007, Aug. 16. The interpreter. The New Yorker.

Devlin, Keith. 1997. Goodbye, Descartes: The End of Logic and the Search for a New Cosmology of the Mind. New York: J. Wiley & Sons.

Eimas, Peter D. 1985. The perception of speech in early infancy. Scientific American 252(1): 46-52.

Frank, Michael C., Daniel L. Everett, Evelina Fedorenko & Edward Gibson. 2008. Number as a cognitive technology: Evidence from Pirahã language and cognition. Cognition 108: 819-824.

Fromkin, Victoria A. 1973. Slips of the tongue. Scientific American 229(6): 110-117.

Fromkin, Victoria A. 2001. Linguistics: The scientific study of human language. In Linguistics: An Introduction to Linguistic Theory, 3-21. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.

Gardner, Howard. 1985. The Mind’s New Science: A History of the Cognitive Revolution. New York: Basic Books.

Gordon, Peter. 2004. Numerical cognition without words: Evidence from Amazonia. Science 306: 496-499.

Gould, James L. & Peter Marler. 1987. Learning by instinct. Scientific American 256(1): 74-85.

Hickok, Gregory, Ursula Bellugi & Edward S. Klima. 2001. Sign language in the brain. Scientific American 284(6): 58-65.

Jackendoff, Ray. 1994. Patterns in the Mind. New York: Basic Books.

Lenhoff, Howard M., Paul P. Wang, Frank Greenberg & Ursula Bellugi. 1997. Williams Syndrome and the brain. Scientific American 277(6): 68-73.

Motley, Michael T. 1985. Slips of the tongue. Scientific American 253(9): 116-127.

Newport, Elissa L. 2002. Critical periods in language development. In Lynn Nadel (ed.), Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science, 737-740. London: Macmillan.

Pinker, Steven. 1994. The Language Instinct. New York: HarperPerennial.

Pullum, Geoffrey K. 1989 The great Eskimo vocabulary hoax. Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 7: 275-281.

Pullum, Geoffrey K. 1999. African American Vernacular English is not Standard English with mistakes. In R. Wheeler (ed.) The Workings of Language, 39-58. Wesport, CT: Praeger.

Sacks, Oliver. 2005, Oct. 31. Recalled to life. The New Yorker.

Senghas, Ann, Sotaro Kita & Asli Özyürek. 2004. Children creating core properties of language: Evidence from an emerging sign language in Nicaragua. Science 305: 1779-1782.

Simon, John. 1980. The corruption of English. In L. Michaels and C. Ricks (eds), The State of the Language, 35-42. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Whitney, Paul. 1998. The Psychology of Language. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.