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Posts by Michael Pleyer

You Can’t Fight in Here! This is BBS!
This is an accepted response to commentaries on Futrell and Mahowald’s Behavioral and Brain Sciences 
target article “How Linguistics Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Language Models.”
Richard Futrell and Kyle Mahowald1
April 1, 2026
Richard Futrell
University of California Irvine, USA rfutrell@uci.edu
Kyle Mahowald
The University of Texas at Austin, USA kyle@utexas.edu
Abstract
Norm, the formal theoretical linguist, and Claudette, the computational language scientist, have a lovely time 
discussing whether modern language models can inform important questions in the language sciences. Just as 
they are about to part ways until they meet again, 25 of their closest friends show up—from linguistics, 
neuroscience, cognitive science, psychology, philosophy, and computer science. We use this discussion to 
highlight what we see as some common underlying issues: the String Statistics Strawman (the mistaken idea that 
LMs can’t be linguistically competent or interesting because they, like their Markov model predecessors, are 
statistical models that learn from strings) and the As Good As it Gets Assumption (the idea that LM research as it 
stands in 2026 is the limit of what it can tell us about linguistics). We clarify the role of LM-based work for 
scientific insights into human language and advocate for a more expansive research program for the language 
sciences in the AI age, one that takes on the commentators’ concerns in order to produce a better and more 
robust science of both human language and of LMs.
1 Introduction
Our position is: language models do not replace linguistic theo

You Can’t Fight in Here! This is BBS! This is an accepted response to commentaries on Futrell and Mahowald’s Behavioral and Brain Sciences target article “How Linguistics Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Language Models.” Richard Futrell and Kyle Mahowald1 April 1, 2026 Richard Futrell University of California Irvine, USA rfutrell@uci.edu Kyle Mahowald The University of Texas at Austin, USA kyle@utexas.edu Abstract Norm, the formal theoretical linguist, and Claudette, the computational language scientist, have a lovely time discussing whether modern language models can inform important questions in the language sciences. Just as they are about to part ways until they meet again, 25 of their closest friends show up—from linguistics, neuroscience, cognitive science, psychology, philosophy, and computer science. We use this discussion to highlight what we see as some common underlying issues: the String Statistics Strawman (the mistaken idea that LMs can’t be linguistically competent or interesting because they, like their Markov model predecessors, are statistical models that learn from strings) and the As Good As it Gets Assumption (the idea that LM research as it stands in 2026 is the limit of what it can tell us about linguistics). We clarify the role of LM-based work for scientific insights into human language and advocate for a more expansive research program for the language sciences in the AI age, one that takes on the commentators’ concerns in order to produce a better and more robust science of both human language and of LMs. 1 Introduction Our position is: language models do not replace linguistic theo

And the award for best paper title and abstract in 2026 so far goes to @futrell.bsky.social & @kmahowald.bsky.social and their response to commentaries in Behavioral and Brain Sciences
arxiv.org/pdf/2604.09501

4 days ago 8 2 0 1
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I’m a cognitive psychologist. Don’t tell me this isn’t a stroopwafel.

5 days ago 89 18 8 0
Review opportunity: Speaking in Pictures

Review opportunity: Speaking in Pictures

Write a book review for Babel! We are seeking a language-lover to review Speaking in Pictures for our magazine

Interested? Get in touch at babelthelanguagemagazine@gmail.com

4 days ago 15 7 0 0
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Validating dynamic time warping as a measure of gesture form similarity - Behavior Research Methods Dynamic time warping (DTW) is a well-known algorithm used to assess the similarity between signals of varying lengths. Initially developed for automatic speech recognition, DTW has found applications in psycholinguistics, particularly in analyzing gesture form similarity. An open question in this domain is how effectively DTW captures gesture form similarity. Here, we validate DTW against human annotations of gesture form similarity across two multimodal interaction corpora and explore its utility as an automatic, continuous measure of gesture form similarity. Our findings reveal weak to moderate correlations between DTW distance and the number of similar gesture features – such as handshape, movement, orientation, and position – suggesting that DTW serves as a useful proxy for gesture form similarity. Additionally, we highlight the importance of qualitative analysis of raw data and DTW predictions in enhancing DTW’s predictive accuracy. Our study offers a rigorous validation of DTW as a measure of gesture form similarity and presents a detailed framework for preprocessing motion tracking data and calculating DTW distance. While none of the methods is perfect, the combination of automatic and manual measures provides a comprehensive approach to understanding and measuring gesture form similarity.

Validating dynamic time warping as a measure of gesture form similarity. New paper by @shoakamine.bsky.social , @dingemansemark.bsky.social & @asliozyurek.bsky.social
doi.org/10.3758/s13428-026-02975-5

4 days ago 9 4 0 1
ChildLens: An egocentric video dataset for activity analysis in children

I am excited to share my first publication in Behavior Research Methods! 🚀

We’ve released ChildLens: 109 hours of open-access, annotated egocentric video/audio from children (ages 3–5).

Paper: rdcu.be/fdfAI

6 days ago 21 6 2 1
Tempo comparison across scales, taxa, modalities, and media. Top left: Spectrogram of cricket(s) chirping for 1 min. Top right: Spectrogram of nearby fireflies flashing for 1 min (N = 21). The colorbars in both heatmaps correspond to Power/frequency (dB/Hz). Bottom: Typical tempos at which different animals signal vs. their respective mean body weights on a logarithmic scale (N = 24). The plot consists of six main groups: insects, amphibians, birds, fish, crustaceans (these last four in an overlapping region due to similar weights—note that the labels here don’t necessarily correspond to specific points as the species are mixed), and mammals. The icons (light bulb, speaker, and a moving human) represent the form of the signal (light, sound, or gesture). Note that the signals are mostly transmitted through air, with two examples through water (both fish, written in blue).

Tempo comparison across scales, taxa, modalities, and media. Top left: Spectrogram of cricket(s) chirping for 1 min. Top right: Spectrogram of nearby fireflies flashing for 1 min (N = 21). The colorbars in both heatmaps correspond to Power/frequency (dB/Hz). Bottom: Typical tempos at which different animals signal vs. their respective mean body weights on a logarithmic scale (N = 24). The plot consists of six main groups: insects, amphibians, birds, fish, crustaceans (these last four in an overlapping region due to similar weights—note that the labels here don’t necessarily correspond to specific points as the species are mixed), and mammals. The icons (light bulb, speaker, and a moving human) represent the form of the signal (light, sound, or gesture). Note that the signals are mostly transmitted through air, with two examples through water (both fish, written in blue).

Do animals have a favored tempo for communicating with each other? This study reveals a hotspot of 0.5-4 Hz for #communication across distinct species & modalities, hypothesizing that this may driven by biophysical commonalities of the receivers' #neurons @plosbiology.org 🧪 plos.io/4ccWuhh

6 days ago 27 12 0 2

We talked about this at the business meeting and improvements are planned for the next conference in Nijmegen. It's also been an issue that we are not a society so local organisers so far haven't had support when it comes to accessibility. The plan is to change that until the next conference!

6 days ago 2 0 1 0
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New paper out in Proceedings of the Royal Society B: we apply linguistic tools to sperm whale vowels.

The result: sperm whale vowels do not just look like human vowels. They also behave like them.

We found several parallels. Like in Latin, whales have short and long vowels.

1 week ago 189 60 6 13

Petition to replace "this research gap has not yet been addressed in the literature" with "which old study no much talk" in perpetuity.

6 days ago 5 0 1 0

Once you're past a certain phase of your life, there is really no greater shame than making a second run to the grocery store in the same day because you forgot some incredibly basic bullshit and the same people are on shift from the first time.

1 week ago 218 15 10 2
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Haha I wish I had taken it!

6 days ago 0 0 0 0

Thanks to @acwiek.bsky.social for capturing me in my element at #EvolangXVI

1 week ago 10 0 0 0

Monika Boruta et al "First observe then perform – Children's changing gestural comprehension between the ages of 2 and 5" evolang.org/2026/proceed...

1 week ago 2 1 0 0
Title page

Title page

This is work based on our recent paper in @cp-trendscognsci.bsky.social linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S1364661325002797

1 week ago 8 2 2 0
me presenting

me presenting

w/ mperlman.bsky.social, @glupyan.bsky.social Koen de Reus & @limorraviv.bsky.social we presented work on going "Beyond Hockett's Design Features"
evolang.org/2026/proceed...

1 week ago 6 2 1 0
Stefan presenting

Stefan presenting

Tobias Ungerer, Michael Pleyer, Theresa Matzinger, Stefan Hartmann, Blair C. Armstrong: "The role of social biases in linguistic innovation: An artificial language learning study" evolang.org/2026/proceed...

1 week ago 3 1 1 0
Przemek presenting

Przemek presenting

Przemysław Żywiczyński et al. had a talk on "How bodily affordances shape the evolution of a novel communication system: A motion-capture study of pantomime and gesture" evolang.org/2026/proceed...

1 week ago 3 1 1 0
Evolang XVI Proceedings Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on the Evolution of Language (EVOLANG XVI)

Emily Davis & Robert Kluender presented a poster on "The evolution of center-embedding: Emergence, ephemerality, and processing constraints" evolang.org/2026/proceed...

1 week ago 2 1 1 0
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From extant to extinct: The role of experiments and interdisciplinary inferences in studying cognitive and language evolution This article evaluates the role of experiments and interdisciplinary inferences in the field of language evolution and, more broadly, studies of cogni…

(This was based on our recent paper in Journal of Archaeological Science: www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...

1 week ago 2 1 1 0

me, Elizabeth Qing Zhang & Svetlana Kuleshova presented a poster on "The role of experimental interdisciplinary inferences in assessing extinct minds"
evolang.org/2026/proceed...

1 week ago 4 1 1 1
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Evolang XVI Proceedings Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on the Evolution of Language (EVOLANG XVI)

Svetlana Kuleshova & Sławomir Wacewicz presented a poster on "The role of communication systems in abstract knowledge transmission" evolang.org/2026/proceed...

1 week ago 2 1 1 0
Evolang XVI Proceedings Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on the Evolution of Language (EVOLANG XVI)

Marta Sibierska et al: "What exactly is aligned in the case of alignment in whole-body communication? Case studies of pantomimic enactments"
evolang.org/2026/proceed...

1 week ago 3 1 1 0
Jonas presenting a talk

Jonas presenting a talk

Jonas Nölle & colleagues had a number of other great talks too!
"The pan-simian geocentric bias revisited: Novel spatial communication systems show a sagittal egocentric bias"
evolang.org/2026/proceed...
"Folk dance as an ancient semiotic system and cultural replicator"
evolang.org/2026/proceed...

1 week ago 2 1 1 0
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Chen Zhou, Przemysław Żywiczyński, Jonas Nölle talked about "A field-based framework to model multimodal value-governed exchange in human social interaction"
evolang.org/2026/proceed...

1 week ago 2 1 1 0
an image of Plovdiv, Bulgaria

an image of Plovdiv, Bulgaria

Had an amazing time at #EvolangXVI, the 16. International Conference on the Evolution of Language in Plovdiv, Bulgaria! Our lab the Center for Language Evolution Studes at Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń was out in full force, a short summary thread of our work 🧵⬇️ #language #linguistics

1 week ago 18 1 2 0

Any #Sociolinguists here willing to review item 3? Please contact me if so.

Otherwise please repost 🙂

#review #linguistics #sociolinguistics #socioling

1 week ago 0 1 1 0
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The Hurford Prize is named after the great Jim Hurford, a co-founder of EVOLANG. Jim is retired now and is not active in academia anymore but the prize is a great way to honour his amazing contribution to language evolution research and to spotlight great work by young researchers!

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And congratulations to @luciewolters.bsky.social and Marco Maolini, the two Runners up for the #EvolangXVI Hurford Prize!

1 week ago 5 0 0 1

Congratulations to @maisyhallam.bsky.social for winning the #EvolangXVI Hurford Prize for the best student presentation!

1 week ago 10 0 2 1
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And that was #EvolangXVI! Thanks to all the organisers and helpers, it was an amazing experience as always! See you all in 2028 in Nijmegen, NL for #EvolangXVII, organised by @limorraviv.bsky.social @asliozyurek.bsky.social and @profsimonfisher.bsky.social!

1 week ago 11 2 0 2