Language and cognition have a close, but cryptic, relationship. Is language just another tool in humans' diverse cognitive toolkit; important for communication, but not necessary for complex, high-level thought? Or is it language that allows us to form and manipulate complex thoughts in the first place? Distinguishing between these possibilities is vital to understanding our most fundamental cognitive faculties and the origin of modern human cognition itself.
The LANGBOOT project proposed that language bootstraps the cognitive complexity of the human mind by enhancing its ability to form and manipulate more elaborate mental representations than would otherwise be possible. In an innovative programme of investigation, we used uses cutting-edge methods from experimental psychology, psycholinguistics, cognitive modelling, and corpus linguistics to examine how words interact with conceptual knowledge gleaned from perceptual and action experience across a range of fundamental cognitive tasks. We tested whether and how language provides indispensable aid to cognitive processing in categorisation, memory performance, and abstract thought, and how such aid could have influenced cognitive evolution.
These investigations let us answer the important questions of whether language provides critical enhancement to the achievable complexity of cognition, and whether language use could have brought about the sudden flowering of art, fine tools and culture that are the hallmarks of complex cognition in modern humans. The overall objective was to develop a comprehensive, multidisciplinary perspective on the role of language in cognition.