Chapter 9
-
Upload
acewing -
Category
Technology
-
view
1.280 -
download
0
Transcript of Chapter 9
![Page 1: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
1
Thinking and Language
Chapter 9
![Page 2: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
2
Thinking and Language
Language Language Structure
Phonemes, Morphemes, grammar, syntax, semantics.
Language Development Stages Theories (Operant Cond. V. Universal
Grammar
The Brain and Language Aphasia, Broca’s area, Wernicke’s
area.
![Page 3: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
3
Thinking and Language Language Influences Thinking and
the dubious nature of the linguistic determinism
Animal Thinking and Language
Do Animals Exhibit Language? The Case of the Apes
![Page 4: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
4
Language
Language, our spoken, written, or gestured words, the way we communicate meaning
to ourselves and others.
Language transmits culture.
M. &
E. B
ernheim/ W
oodfin Cam
p & A
ssociates
![Page 5: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
5
Language Structure
• Phonemes• Morphemes• Grammar
– Semantics – Syntax
![Page 6: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
6
Language DevelopmentChildren 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.
Motherese
![Page 7: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
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.
![Page 8: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
8
When do we learn language?
One-Word Stage: Beginning at or around the child’s first birthday, the child starts to speak one word at a time and is able to make family members understand him or her. The word doggy may mean look at the dog out there.
Holophrase
![Page 9: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
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.
![Page 10: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
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.
![Page 11: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/11.jpg)
11
When do we learn language?
![Page 12: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/12.jpg)
12
Explaining Language Development
1. Operant Learning: Skinner (1957, 1985) believed that language development may be explained on the basis of learning principles such as association, imitation, and reinforcement.
![Page 13: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/13.jpg)
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.
Universal Grammar A Language Acquisition Device
![Page 14: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/14.jpg)
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.
![Page 15: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/15.jpg)
15
Genes, Brain, & Language
Genes design the mechanisms for a language, and experience modifies the
brain.
In this way, language development is thought to be a product of gene
environment interaction.
![Page 16: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/16.jpg)
16
Critical Period
Learning new languages gets harder with age.
![Page 17: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/17.jpg)
17
Brain areas associated with language processing.
• Broca’s area• Wernicke’s area• Aphasia
![Page 18: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/18.jpg)
18
Thinking & Language
Language and thinking intricately intertwine.
Rubber B
all/ Alm
ay
![Page 19: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/19.jpg)
19
Language Influences Thinking
Linguistic Determinism: Whorf (1956) suggested that language determines the way we think.
For example, he noted that the Hopi people do not have the past tense for verbs. Therefore, the Hopi cannot think readily about the past.
Sense of self and language.
Conclusion: Thought processes and language interact.
![Page 20: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/20.jpg)
20
Thinking in Images
To a large extent thinking is language-based. When alone, we may talk to
ourselves. However, we also think in images.
2. When we are riding our bicycle.
1. When we open the hot water tap.
We don’t think in words:
![Page 21: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/21.jpg)
21
Images and Brain
Imagining a physical activity activates the same brain regions as when actually
performing the activity.
Jean Duffy D
ecety, Septem
ber 2003
![Page 22: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/22.jpg)
22
Language and Thinking
Traffic runs both ways between language and thinking.
![Page 23: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/23.jpg)
23
Do animals have a language?They do communicate……
Animal Thinking & Language
Honey bees communicate by dancing. The dancemoves clearly indicate the direction of the nectar.
![Page 24: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/24.jpg)
24
The Case of Apes
Gardner and Gardner (1969) used American Sign Language (ASL) to
train Washoe, a chimp, who learned 181 signs by the age of 32.
![Page 25: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/25.jpg)
25
Syntax ComprehensionSome pygmy chimpanzees can develop even greater vocabularies and perhaps semantic
nuances in learning a language (Savage-Rumbaugh, 1993).
Kanzi (shown below) developed vocabulary for hundreds of words and phrases.
Copyright of G
reat Ape T
rust of Iowa
![Page 26: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/26.jpg)
26
But Can Apes Really Talk?1. Apes acquire their limited vocabularies
with a great deal of difficulty, unlike children who develop vocabularies at amazing rates.
2. Chimpanzees can make signs to receive a reward, just as a pigeon who pecks at the key receives a reward. However, pigeons have not learned a language.
3. Chimpanzees use signs meaningfully but lack human syntax.
![Page 27: Chapter 9](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022052823/555093c4b4c905a85c8b52dc/html5/thumbnails/27.jpg)
27
Conclusions
If we say that animals can use meaningful sequences of signs to communicate a
capability for language, our understanding would be naive… Steven Pinker (1995)
concludes, “chimps do not develop language.”
This is especially so when we define language as verbal or signed expression of
complex grammar.