24
views
0
recommends
+1 Recommend
0 collections
    0
    shares
      • Record: found
      • Abstract: found
      • Article: found
      Is Open Access

      Spontaneous Emergence of Legibility in Writing Systems: The Case of Orientation Anisotropy

      brief-report
      1 ,
      Cognitive Science
      John Wiley and Sons Inc.
      Orientation anisotropy, Oblique effect, Symmetry, Cultural evolution, Neural recycling

      Read this article at

      Bookmark
          There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.

          Abstract

          Cultural forms are constrained by cognitive biases, and writing is thought to have evolved to fit basic visual preferences, but little is known about the history and mechanisms of that evolution. Cognitive constraints have been documented for the topology of script features, but not for their orientation. Orientation anisotropy in human vision, as revealed by the oblique effect, suggests that cardinal (vertical and horizontal) orientations, being easier to process, should be overrepresented in letters. As this study of 116 scripts shows, the orientation of strokes inside written characters massively favors cardinal directions, and it is organized in such a way as to make letter recognition easier: Cardinal and oblique strokes tend not to mix, and mirror symmetry is anisotropic, favoring vertical over horizontal symmetry. Phylogenetic analyses and recently invented scripts show that cultural evolution over the last three millennia cannot be the sole cause of these effects.

          Related collections

          Most cited references42

          • Record: found
          • Abstract: found
          • Article: not found

          Cultural recycling of cortical maps.

          Part of human cortex is specialized for cultural domains such as reading and arithmetic, whose invention is too recent to have influenced the evolution of our species. Representations of letter strings and of numbers occupy reproducible locations within large-scale macromaps, respectively in the left occipito-temporal and bilateral intraparietal cortex. Furthermore, recent fMRI studies reveal a systematic architecture within these areas. To explain this paradoxical cerebral invariance of cultural maps, we propose a neuronal recycling hypothesis, according to which cultural inventions invade evolutionarily older brain circuits and inherit many of their structural constraints.
            Bookmark
            • Record: found
            • Abstract: found
            • Article: not found

            Ratcheting up the ratchet: on the evolution of cumulative culture.

            Some researchers have claimed that chimpanzee and human culture rest on homologous cognitive and learning mechanisms. While clearly there are some homologous mechanisms, we argue here that there are some different mechanisms at work as well. Chimpanzee cultural traditions represent behavioural biases of different populations, all within the species' existing cognitive repertoire (what we call the 'zone of latent solutions') that are generated by founder effects, individual learning and mostly product-oriented (rather than process-oriented) copying. Human culture, in contrast, has the distinctive characteristic that it accumulates modifications over time (what we call the 'ratchet effect'). This difference results from the facts that (i) human social learning is more oriented towards process than product and (ii) unique forms of human cooperation lead to active teaching, social motivations for conformity and normative sanctions against non-conformity. Together, these unique processes of social learning and cooperation lead to humans' unique form of cumulative cultural evolution.
              Bookmark
              • Record: found
              • Abstract: found
              • Article: not found

              Cardinal rules: Visual orientation perception reflects knowledge of environmental statistics

              Humans are remarkably good at performing visual tasks, but experimental measurements reveal substantial biases in the perception of basic visual attributes. An appealing hypothesis is that these biases arise through a process of statistical inference, in which information from noisy measurements is fused with a probabilistic model of the environment. But such inference is optimal only if the observer’s internal model matches the environment. Here, we provide evidence that this is the case. We measured performance in an orientation-estimation task, demonstrating the well-known fact that orientation judgements are more accurate at cardinal (horizontal and vertical) orientations, along with a new observation that judgements made under conditions of uncertainty are strongly biased toward cardinal orientations. We estimate observers’ internal models for orientation and find that they match the local orientation distribution measured in photographs. We also show how a neural population could embed probabilistic information responsible for such biases.
                Bookmark

                Author and article information

                Contributors
                morin@shh.mpg.de
                Journal
                Cogn Sci
                Cogn Sci
                10.1111/(ISSN)1551-6709
                COGS
                Cognitive Science
                John Wiley and Sons Inc. (Hoboken )
                0364-0213
                1551-6709
                10 October 2017
                March 2018
                : 42
                : 2 ( doiID: 10.1111/cogs.2018.42.issue-2 )
                : 664-677
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ] Minds and Tradition Research Group Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History
                Author notes
                [*] [* ]Correspondence should be sent to Olivier Morin, Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Jena, Germany. E‐mail: morin@ 123456shh.mpg.de
                Article
                COGS12550
                10.1111/cogs.12550
                5887916
                29023934
                33c56473-08f5-4fe0-88d8-f07cb5f84350
                Copyright © 2017 The Authors. Cognitive Science published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of Cognitive Science Society.

                This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 29 May 2014
                : 08 July 2017
                : 14 August 2017
                Page count
                Figures: 3, Tables: 0, Pages: 14, Words: 5593
                Categories
                Brief Report
                Brief Reports
                Custom metadata
                2.0
                cogs12550
                March 2018
                Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_NLMPMC version:version=5.3.3 mode:remove_FC converted:28.03.2018

                orientation anisotropy,oblique effect,symmetry,cultural evolution,neural recycling

                Comments

                Comment on this article