1 / 48

Language Development: a system of symbols

Language Development: a system of symbols. Generativity: using a finite set of words to generate infinite ideas Language Comprehension Language Production. Components of language. Components of language. Language Development: need of a human brain.

benard
Télécharger la présentation

Language Development: a system of symbols

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Language Development: a system of symbols • Generativity: using a finite set of words to generate infinite ideas • Language Comprehension • Language Production

  2. Components of language

  3. Components of language

  4. Language Development: need of a human brain

  5. Language Development: need of a human brain

  6. Primate Communication and Symbolic Skills (tool use) Vocabulary -- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wRM7vTrIIis Receptive vocabulary -- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h7IdghtkKmA&feature=related Imitation and discourse (Oprah piece) -- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jKauXrp9dl4&feature=related

  7. The human brain & language

  8. The human brain & language • Most linguists ignore the • Basal Ganglia (BG) • Swearing associated with • BG involvement • (see Steve Pinker, 2008) • Parkinson’s patients • “loss” of language • implicates the • importance of BG

  9. Crucial need for language stimulation • Talking to the baby is essential: correlation between mom and baby’s language • “Infant Directed Speech” (“motherese”) • How we teach the baby about our “mother tongue” and how our society communicates

  10. Crucial need for language stimulation • Infant Directed Speech & hearing the sounds of language • prosody: rhythm, tempo, cadence, melody, intonation • categorical perception: differentiating the phonemes (sounds) of your “mother tongue” • Turn-taking & social reciprocity: the communication dance

  11. “Categorical” Speech Perception • Learning the phonemes (speech sounds) of your “mother tongue” • 200 “speech sounds” (sound “categories”) universally heard by all newborns • 45-ish sound categories (/bah/, /pah/, /rah/, /lah/, etc.) are heard in typical languages by adults • Why are they called “categories” of sound? • Because “bah” is always “bah” no matter who says it • You hear “bah” if it is said by 2 year old or 22-year old; female or male speaker, etc.

  12. “Categorical” Speech Perception • Learning the phonemes (speech sounds) of your “mother tongue” • What happened to the other 150-ish sounds categories that young babies can hear, but are lost by adulthood? • Examples: Adult Japanese speakers do not distinguish the sounds /rah/ vs. /lah/ -- “flied lice” for “fried rice” • The Japanese language do not differentiate these sound “categories”(they are the same sound in Japanese) • English does differentiate these sounds in their langauge • What sounds do babies continue to “hear”? Those that they are routinely exposed to -- “Use it, or lose it”

  13. Crucial need for language stimulation • Critical Periods • Victor the “wild child” -- Aveyron, France, 1800: learned a few words. • Genie imprisoned in home until 13-years of age • Developed “toddler-like” language • “Father take piece wood. Hit. Cry.”

  14. Language Depervation • Oxana Malaya -- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2PyUfG9u-P4 • Genie -- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ICUZN462qMw

  15. Crucial need for language stimulation • Language Stimulation: case of bilingualism • Very young children (before 1-year) can differentiate two languages • Maybe (??) some lags or disorders in early language when exposed to more than one? • Risk: “semilingualism” • Better performance on numerous cognitive tasks

  16. The Progression of Language Acquisition • At Birth • Universal speech perception • Localize & attend to language (recognition of mom) • 6-to-8-weeks • “Cooing” and production of simple sounds

  17. The Progression of Language Acquisition • 5-to-6-months • Beginning of simple vocal imitation & turn-taking • Following the gaze of another person (beginnings of shared “discourse”) • Words begin to “pop out” (listening longer to familiar words like their own name v. novel words)

  18. The Progression of Language Acquisition • 6-to-9-months • Begin to possess the categories of the “mother tongue”(losing the universal perception) • Possess the beginnings of prosody of “mother tongue”(recognizing the “stress patterns” -- “ENG-lish” OF-ten” “SEC-ond”) • Babble in the mother tongue (case of the French 8-month olds) • Beginnings of expanded word recognition (“where’s mama?”)

  19. The Progression of Language Acquisition • 10-to-18-months (variability now widens) • Intersubjectivity: 2 partners sharing common focus • Joint attention: 2 partners sharing in a common object • “Declarative” pointing • First words (consonant-vowel pairing: “hah” for “”hot”)

  20. The Progression of Language Acquisition • 10-to-18-months (variability now widens) • Receptive vocabulary (comprehension/recognition) ranges from 10-to-150 words • “holophrastic Period”: 1 word (1 syllable) means an entire phrase (“Bah” means “I want my bottle” or “I want juice” or “I want cup”, etc.) • Word combinations carry meaning (“She’s kissing the ball” v. “she’s kissing the keys”)

  21. The Progression of Language Acquisition • 18-months (variability continues to widen) • “Word Spurt” -- 5-to-10 new words per day • “Telegraphic speech” -- “more juice”

  22. The Progression of Language Acquisition • 2-years • Explosion in comprehension (understanding whatever you say) • Explosion in “mean length of utterance” (from using 1 word to 4 word phrases) • The beginning of real syntax/grammar use (“eat cookie”, but not “cookie eat”) • The beginnings of “wh” questions

  23. Large variability among children in langauge acquisition

  24. Large variability among children in langauge acquisition

  25. The Progression of Language Acquisition • 2 1/2-to-3 1/2-years • Beginnings of complex sentences (complex syntax) • “Crib talk” -- children chattering to themselves in long conversations • 4-years • Plurals (recongizing a picture of “a ‘wug’ with another “wug” is…? “Wugs”) • Overregularization errors: “mans” and goed” • Gradual use of irregulars (“men” and “went”)

  26. The Progression of Language Acquisition • 5-to-6-year olds • Vocabulary that rivals adults (about 10,000 words) • Use of narratives -- descriptions of past events that have story lines • Sustain conversation with back and forth, staying on topic • Make few grammatical errors

  27. The Progression of Language Acquisition • 10-year olds • 40,000 word vocabulary • University Students • Up to 150,000 word vocabulary

  28. Theories of Language Development: Nativist View • Nativist Views: language is too complex to come from experience alone • Noam Chomsky • “Universal Grammar:” innate structure of syntax • Need only minimal and passive input to trigger language development

  29. Theories of Language Development: Nativist View • Nativist Views: language is too complex to come from experience alone • Noam Chomsky & Modularity Hypothesis • Innate & self-contained “module” for language that operates separately from other cognitive functions • Evolved through Darwinian selection • Involves very specific and small number of brain reagions (i.e., Broca’s and Wernicke’s areas)

  30. Theories of Language Development: Nativist View • Best evidence for nativist view? • Link between brain structures (Broca & Wernicke) and language • Deaf children surpass their poor-signing parents & impose syntax on their sign language (despite never being taught to do so)

  31. Theories of Language Development: Nativist View Points of dispute with a nativist view? • Universal grammar: however there is not one universal grammar (there are several) • Specific grammar requires exposure to mother tongue • Experience is crucial for language to develop • Over-emphasis on syntax: ignoring the importance of language in social context

  32. Theories of Language Development: Nativist View Points of dispute with a nativist view? • Ignoring language disorders related to Parkinson’s and Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) – no cortical involvement • Language acquisition can be explained by general cognitive function • information-processing models explain some aspects of language acquisition well • no need to claim a “specific language module”

  33. Theories of Language Development: Interactionist View

  34. Theories of Language Development: Interactionist View

  35. Theories of Language Development: Interactionist View

  36. · Eleanor Bates: computational models (neural-networks) can explain language development · Information needed to learn language is in the language it’s self General cognitive skills allow infants & children to notice and - learn “statistical regularities” in speech No need for “language modules” to account for findings - These models give the most accurate account of what - children actually do (“over-regularization” errors i.e., “mans” and “goed”). Theories of Language Development: Information-Processing (Connectionist) View

  37. Connectionist Theories: Neural-Networks Models

  38. Connectionist Theories: Neural-Networks Models

  39. Theories of Language Development: Information-Processing (Connectionist) View Critique: Haven’t tested many aspects of language yet

  40. Theories of Language Development: “Where the truth may rest?”

  41. Language is a “symbol system”: What are symbols?

  42. What does it take to use symbols?

  43. The evolution of “symbolic representation”

More Related