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Language Chapter 9, Lecture 2

Language Chapter 9, Lecture 2. “When we speak, our brain and voice box conjure up air pressure waves that we send banging against another’s ear drum – enabling us to transfer thoughts from our brain into theirs.” - David Myers. Language.

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Language Chapter 9, Lecture 2

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  1. LanguageChapter 9, Lecture 2 “When we speak, our brain and voice box conjure up air pressure waves that we send banging against another’s ear drum – enabling us to transfer thoughts from our brain into theirs.” - David Myers

  2. Language Language, our spoken, written, or gestured work, is the way we communicate meaning to ourselves and others. M. & E. Bernheim/ Woodfin Camp & Associates Language transmits culture.

  3. Language Language, our spoken, written, or gestured work, is the way we communicate meaning to ourselves and others. “I know that you can know why I worry that you think this sentence is starting to get too complex, but that complexity – and our capacity to communicate and comprehend it – is what distinguishes human language capacity.” - David Myers

  4. Language Structure Phoneme- in language, the smallest distinctive sound unit Morpheme- in language, the smallest unit that carries meaning; may be a word or a part of a word Quick Question – identify all of the phonemes and morphemes in the word “smallest”

  5. Language Structure Grammar– in a language, a system of rules that enables us to communicate with and understand others. Consists of: Semantics– the set of rules by which we derive meaning from morphemes, words and sentences in a given language; also, the study of meaning Syntax– the rules for combining words into grammatically sensible sentences in a given language

  6. Language Development Children learn their native languages much before learning to add 2+2. We learn, on average (after age 1), 3,500 words a year, amassing 60,000 words by the time we graduate from high school. Time Life Pictures/ Getty Images

  7. When do we learn language? Babbling Stage:Beginning at 4 months, the infant spontaneously utters various sounds, like ah-goo. Babbling is not imitation of adult speech.

  8. When do we learn language? One-Word Stage:Beginning at or around his first birthday, a child starts to speak one word at a time and is able to make family members understand him. The word doggy may mean look at the dog out there.

  9. When do we learn language? Two-Word Stage:Before the 2nd year, a child starts to speak in two-word sentences. This form of speech is called telegraphic speech because the child speaks like a telegram: “Go car,” means I would like to go for a ride in the car.

  10. When do we learn language? Longer phrases:After telegraphic speech, children begin uttering longer phrases (Mommy get ball) with syntactical sense, and by early elementary school they are employing humor. You never starve in the desert because of all the sand-which-is there.

  11. When do we learn language? p.386

  12. Explaining Language Development • Operant Learning: Skinner (1957, 1985) believed that language development may be explained on the basis of learning principles such as association, imitation, and reinforcement.

  13. Explaining Language Development 2. Inborn Universal Grammar: Chomsky (1959, 1987) opposed Skinner’s ideas and suggested that the rate of language acquisition is so fast that it cannot be explained through learning principles, and thus most of it is inborn.

  14. Explaining Language Development Childhood is a critical period for fully developing certain aspects of language. Children never exposed to any language (spoken or signed) by about age 7 gradually lose their ability to master any language.

  15. Genes, Brain, & Language Genes design the mechanisms for a language, and experience modifies the brain. Michael Newman/ Photo Edit, Inc. David Hume Kennerly/ Getty Images Eye of Science/ Photo Researchers, Inc.

  16. Critical Period Learning new languages gets harder with age.

  17. The Brain and Language

  18. The Brain and Language PET scan activity when hearing, seeing, and speaking words

  19. Homework Read p.391-395 “Monkeys mostly know what they see. Thanks to language, we know much that we’ve never seen.” - David Myers

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