Title: First language acquisition
1First language acquisition
- How do children learn language?
2Some observations
- Virtually all children learn to speak or sign
their native language. - True across cultures, economic situations,
educational backgrounds. - Childrens language development follows the same
time course for children acquiring all languages. - Similar to other biological endowments like
vision and the ability to walk - The answer to How do children learn language?
must hold for all children, all languages and all
societies.
3What input do children need to learn a language ?
- Interaction with language
- Not mere exposure hearing children of deaf
parents do not learn spoken language from TV - Primary input may be from other children
societies differ in the extent to which adults
talk to children
4Do parents teach children how to speak?
- Reinforcement Theory Parents teach children
language by correcting errors and rewarding their
grammatical utterances - Many parents correct their young childrens
errors, but many do not. - Parents usually correct content, not grammar.
- Kid Matt goed to school .
- Mom No, Matt went to the PARTY.
- Correcting a young childs grammar is an exercise
in futility.
5A famous example
- Kid Nobody does like me.
- Mom No, say, nobody likes me.
- Kid Nobody doesnt like me.
- eight repetitions of this dialogue
- Mom No, listen carefully say Nobody likes me.
- Kid Oh, nobody dont like me.
- (from McNeill, 1966, p. 69, as cited in Berko
Gleason Ratner 1993)
6Positive evidence vs. Negative evidence
- The evidence that children use to find patterns
in their language is positive evidence (examples
of possible sentences), not negative evidence
(explicit correction).
7Do children learn to talk by imitating what they
hear?
- Imitation Theory Children learn language by
mimicking what they hear. - Children do not talk like miniature adults.
- They produce forms and constructions that have no
adult model. - No bed, nana (banana), Mommy tie shoe
- Direct imitation, i.e., repeating a parents
sentence or phrase word-for-word is rare in child
speech
8Another Theory of Language Acquisition
- Active Construction of a Grammar Theory
- Children build on innate abilities.
- They discover patterns in the language around
them and hypothesize rules that account for these
patterns. - Childrens productions obey these rules, although
they may violate rules of the adult grammar.
9How do people talk to babies and young children?
- Child-directed speech, Motherese
- different lexicon (baby words)
- topics Here and now
- conversation play, turn taking
- high pitch, exaggerated intonation
- Does it help?
- Holds infants attention
- Some evidence that it helps infants learn
- Cannot be an absolute requirement
- Some families and cultures do not adapt speech in
this way
10Conversation play
- Mom Hello. Give me a smile. gentle poke
- Baby yawns
- Mom Sleepy, are you? You woke up early today.
- Baby opens fist and gurgles
- Mom Do you want to hold Mommys hand?
- Baby grasps mothers finger
- Mom Yeah, thats what you wanted.
11Preferential Looking Paradigm
12Perceptual abilities of infants
- Newborns prefer their mothers voice
- Newborns prefer listening to their native
language - Infants less than a year old can distinguish
between sounds that are not phonemic in their
native language - Babies as young as 4 mo. know that certain mouth
shapes produce certain vowels - 7 ½ mo. olds prefer stories with familiar words
- 9 mo. olds prefer listening to non-words that
conform to patterns in their native language
13An infants earliest sounds
- earliest sounds burping, sighing, sucking,
crying - 2 mos. Cooing
- 4 mos. consonant-like sounds, more variation,
sustained laughter - 6 mos. babbling (ba, da, ga)
- 8 mos. reduplicated babbling (ba ba ba ba, da
da da) - 10 mos. varied (jargon) babbling (ba di bi, da
gu ba) - Babbling reflects the phonology of the infants
native language (e.g., Japanese babies produce
more ks)
14Babbling in infants acquiring a signed language
- Deaf infants babble vocally, but stop much
earlier than hearing infants - Deaf and hearing infants acquiring a signed
language babble manually - Manual babbling distinguishable from gestures
(Petitto Marentette (1991)) - handshapes found in ASL
- syllable types found in ASL
- location restricted, as in ASL
15Earliest Words and the One-Word Stage
- starts around 11, 12 months
- Babbling continues
- 1st words refer to things that are very salient
to child - people, objects, pets
- May only loosely resemble adult model
- Not always easy to identify
- Ba!
- Holophrastic carry meaning of whole sentence
- Milk!
- Comprehension outpaces production
- Comprehension vocabulary much smaller than
production vocabulary - Children in one-word stage can understand longer
utterances
16Two-Word Stage
- Starts 18-24 mos.
- Vocabulary of more than 50 words
- Utterances have consistent word order
- Express certain semantic relations
- Agent action baby sleep
- Action object kick ball
- Entity location teddy bed
- Possessor possessive Mommy book
- Telegraphic no function words or function
morphemes (on, -s, etc.)
17Word learning strategies
- Starting late in the two-word stage, children
learn many new words a day - They have strategies to help with the task.
- Whole object principle
- A word refers to the whole object, not just a
part. - One name principle
- Each object has one name. A new word will not
mean the same thing as an existing word.
18Overextensions and underextensions
- Overextension child uses a word to refer to a
large set than adults do - doggy dogs, cats, stuffed animals, feather
dusters - Underextension child uses a word in a more
restricted sense than adults do - doggy only beagles or German shepherds
19Beyond the two-word stage
- No three-word stage after two-word stage,
children produce utterances of different lengths
(1, 2, 3, 4, 5 words) - Still telegraphic, function words and function
morphemes appear - Typically acquired in a consistent order
- -ing She walking
- -s She walks
- -ed She walked
20Plurals
- Two kinds of English plurals
- regular shoe/shoes, dog, dogs
- irregular man/men, sheep/sheep
- Child often uses adult irregular form (say, men)
for a while, then start using the regular form
(mans). - error reflects refinement of grammar
- Child has learned the rule that plural is formed
by adding s - overgeneralizes
21A classic test
22- By 3 years, vocabulary of 1000 words
- 80 of utterances understandable even by
strangers - Do not yet have adult command of all sentence
structures. - Must still learn many metalinguistic skills