Title: The development of language
1The development of language
- Structural and functional perspectives
2Overview
- (1) What is language? Brother Johna case
study. - (2) Language structure.
- (3) The development of linguistic structures.
- (4) Language function.
- (5) The development of language use.
-
3I Brother John
- Discussion.
- What is language?
- What does Brother Johns disorder tell us about
the relationship between language, thinking, and
social functioning?
4I Brother John
A complex rule-governed behavior that people use
to influence the thoughts and feelings of other
people.
- Discussion.
- What is language?
- What does Brother Johns disorder tell us about
the relationship between language, thinking, and
social functioning?
5I Brother John
A complex rule-governed behavior that people use
to influence the thoughts and feelings of other
people. Combines perceptual, motor, social skills.
- Discussion.
- What is language?
- What does Brother Johns disorder tell us about
the relationship between language, thinking, and
social functioning?
Language can be dissociated from thinking and
certain aspects of social functioning.
6II Language structure
7(1) Phonemes
- Smallest unit of sound that can affect meaning.
- Cat versus bat.
- Cah and bah are phonemes.
8(2) Morphemes
- Smallest unit of language that carries meaning.
- Includes prefixes and suffixes that are used to
create plurals, past tenses, etc.
Bounce
ed
9(3) Words
- An ordered set of consonants and vowels that is
associated with specific meaning or referent.
10(4) Grammar
- Rules that specify how words can be arranged to
form propositions.
11(5) Metalinguistic awareness
- Refers to the ability to reflect on language as
an object. - Involved in alphabetical spelling for example.
12III Development of linguistic structure
- For each structural feature of language, Ill
provide a brief empirical sketch and then discuss
theories. - Theories?
- (1) Learning perspective
- (2) Cognitive perspective
- (3) Linguistic/nativist perspective
- (4) Social Interactionist approach
13IIIa Phonological development
- Systematic age-related changes in the ability to
perceive and produce the elementary sounds of
language.
14Phonological development
- Systematic age-related changes in the ability to
perceive and produce the elementary sounds of
language.
Categorical phoneme perception _at_ 1 month Vowel
discrimination _at_ 2 months Loss of the ability to
discriminate non-native phonemes by the end of
the 1st year
15Phonological development
- Systematic age-related changes in the ability to
perceive and produce the elementary sounds of
language.
16Phonological development
- Systematic age-related changes in the ability to
perceive and produce the elementary sounds of
language.
6-8 weeks ? cooing (vowel-like sounds with
consonant produced by closure of the back of the
mouth (e.g., g or k) Later, comes to include
consonants produced by closure of the front of
the mouth (e.g., m or b)
17Phonological development
- Systematic age-related changes in the ability to
perceive and produce the elementary sounds of
language.
3 to 6 months ? Emergence of babbling, the
production of consonant-vowel combinations like
da and ba Reduplicated babbling ? Repetition
of C-V combinations 9 to 10 months ? More complex
combinations
18Phonological development
- Systematic age-related changes in the ability to
perceive and produce the elementary sounds of
language.
- Interesting babbling facts
- Cross-linguistic consistency in the timing of the
onset of cooing and babbling, although some
cross-linguistic differences in the sounds
produced - Deaf infants babble in the first months of life
19Theories
- Nativist view emphasize the fact that early
expressive and receptive abilities appear to be
universal, suggesting the role of innate factors.
20Theories
- Social-interactionist theory emphasizes the
effect of social interaction on phonological
development - Loss of non-functional categories (Werker Tees,
1984). - Cross language differences in patterned speech.
- Premature infants babble at the same age as full
-term infants.
21IIIb Learning words
22IIIb Learning words
- Familiarize
- tupirogolabubidakupadotitupirobidakutupiro
(Saffran et al., 1996)
23IIIb Learning words
- Familiarize
- tupirogolabubidakupadotitupirobidakutupiro
- Test tupiro (word)
- golabu (word)
- dapiku (nonword)
- tilado (nonword)
(Saffran et al., 1996)
24IIIb Learning words
- Word learning active or passive?
25IIIb Learning words
- Word learning active or passive?
26IIIb Learning words
- Evidence of word-comprehension _at_ 6 months
(Tincoff Juszyck, 1999) .
27Mommy
Tincoff Jusczyk, 1999
28Tincoff Jusczyk, 1999
29IIIb Learning words
- Evidence of word-comprehension _at_ 6 months
- By 6, children understand over 5,000 different
words. - 20 new words a week for 5 years!!!
30IIIb Learning words
- Words learning begins during mother-infant
interaction. - Best when child focussed on object, and mother
labels it. - Association formed.
- How does child know what the word refers to?
31IIIb Learning words
- Markman ? Children apply constraints when
learning the meaning of new words.
32IIIb Learning words
- Markman ? Children apply constraints when
learning the meaning of new words.
Mutual Exclusivity Bias
33IIIb Learning words
- Markman ? Children apply constraints when
learning the meaning of new words.
Show me the lax
Mutual Exclusivity Bias
34IIIb Learning words
- Markman ? Children apply constraints when
learning the meaning of new words.
Show me the lax
Mutual Exclusivity Bias
35IIIb Learning words
- What are the words that infants first learn?
- Nelson (1973) ? First words name objects (65),
or actions (14). - Do infants first words have the same meaning
they do for adults?
36IIIb Learning words
- No Often different from adult meanings.
- Overextensions.
- Meaning of a word overgeneralized.
- "Dog" for any animal with 4 legs.
- Underextensions.
- Meaning of a word too constrained.
- Car refers only to childs fathers car.
37IIIb Learning words
- Most frequently used words? Gopnik (1982)
- Longitudinal, home-observation study.
- Before 24 months, children most frequently use
words that provide commentary on their ongoing
activity. - "Gone", "there", "oh dear", "down".
38IIIb Learning words ? Theories
- Learning theory ? Word learning governed by
mechanisms of behavioural learning.
39IIIb Learning words ? Theories
- Learning theory ? Word learning governed by
mechanisms of behavioural learning. - (1) Classical conditioning
- Sight of object paired with sound of words...word
learned.
40IIIb Learning words ? Theories
- Learning theory ? Word learning governed by
mechanisms of behavioural learning. - (1) Classical conditioning
- Sight of object paired with sound of words...word
learned. - (2) Operant conditioning
- Parents shape their children's first words.
41IIIb Learning words ? Theories
- Learning theory ? Word learning governed by
mechanisms of behavioural learning. - (1) Classical conditioning
- Sight of object paired with sound of words...word
learned. - (2) Operant conditioning
- Parents shape their children's first words.
- (3) Imitation
- Repeat what others say
42IIIb Learning words ? Theories
- Challenge Word learning seems to be constrained
by children's cognitive development.
43IIIb Learning words ? Theories
- Cognitive developmental theory Gopnik Melzoff
(1986) - Acquisition of "there" correlated with
performance on means-ends tasks. - And "gone" correlated with performance on object
permanence tasks. - Stage of cognitive development constrains
word-learning.
44IIIb Learning words ? Theories
- Nativist theory Fodor
- We are born with certain concepts (e.g.
authority). - These concepts constrain the sort of words that
appear in our vocabulary.
45IIIb Learning words ? Theories
- Interactionist view Emphasizes the importance of
social interaction for word learning - Evidence?
46IIIb Learning words ? Theories
- Interactionist view Emphasizes the importance of
social interaction for word learning - Evidence?
Huttenlocher et al., 1991 Frequency of
mother-child talk predicts vocabulary size
47IIIb Learning words ? Theories
- Interactionist view Emphasizes the importance of
social interaction for word learning - Evidence?
Hart Risley, 1995 Investigated the association
between social class, home environment, and
childrens vocabulary. All 3 variables highly
correlated.
48IIIcThe development of grammar
- Telegraphic speech ? Early 2-word speech that
contains few modifiers, prepositions, or
connectives. - Like a telegram.
49IIIcThe development of grammar
1. Telegraphic speech
- Examples (Brown, 1973)
- (1) Agent-action "Tommy hit"
- (2) Action-object "Give cookie"
- (3) Possessor-possession "My car"
- (4) Questions Where daddy?
50IIIcThe development of grammar
1. Telegraphic speech
- Is telegraphic speech grammatical?
51IIIcThe development of grammar
1. Telegraphic speech
- Is telegraphic speech grammatical?
Braine, 1976 ? Pivot grammar Pivot word open
word e.g., More ________
52IIIcThe development of grammar
1. Telegraphic speech
- Is telegraphic speech grammatical?
Braine, 1976 ? Pivot grammar Pivot word open
word e.g., More ________
Bloom, 1990 ? No wild grammars (e.g., Big
he)? Gross violations rare (e.g., Daddy eat
vs Eat daddy)
53IIIcThe development of grammar
2. Inflectional morphology
54IIIcThe development of grammar
2. Inflectional morphology
- Rules governing the use of morphemes like
inflections (e.g., -s, -ed, -ing) that alter the
syntactical function of specific words
Example Past tense Acquired in a regular sequence
55IIIcThe development of grammar
2. Inflectional morphology
- Rules governing the use of morphemes like
inflections (e.g., -s, -ed, -ing) that alter the
syntactical function of specific words
Example Past tense Acquired in a regular sequence
Not all past tenses formed through use of the
stem -ed rule E.g., Run/Ran
56IIIcThe development of grammar
2. Inflectional morphology
- Rules governing the use of morphemes like
inflections (e.g., -s, -ed, -ing) that alter the
syntactical function of specific words
How do children learn the exceptions?
Example Past tense Acquired in a regular sequence
Not all past tenses formed through use of the
stem -ed rule E.g., Run/Ran
57IIIcThe development of grammar
3. Irregular past-tense
58IIIcThe development of grammar
3. Irregular past-tense
- Developmental U-shaped curve
59IIIcThe development of grammar
3. Irregular past-tense
Developmental U-shaped curve
- Developmental U-shaped curve
Proportion correct
Time
60IIIcThe development of grammar
3. Irregular past-tense
- Developmental U-shaped curve
61IIIcThe development of grammar
3. Irregular past-tense
- Developmental U-shaped curve
- Irregular form learned first. Ran
- Then over-regularization occurs. Runned
- Finally, irregular forms reappear. Ran
- Why does this occur?
62IIIcThe development of grammar
3. Irregular past-tense
- Competing mechanisms
- Irregulars first learned through association.
- Then, children learn the past-tense rule.
- Over-applied.
- Must re-learn the exceptions.
63Theories of grammar development
- Behavioural theory ? Language acquired through
learning (e.g., operant conditioning, imitation) - Parents and teachers model grammatically correct
language and provide feedback - Evidence?
64Theories of grammar development
1. Behavioural theory
- Evidence more contrary than supportive.
65Theories of grammar development
1. Behavioural theory
- Evidence more contrary than supportive.
- Brown and Hanlon (1970) ? 3 findings
- Ungrammatical sentences rarely corrected
66Theories of grammar development
1. Behavioural theory
- Evidence more contrary than supportive.
- Brown and Hanlon (1970) ? 3 findings
- Ungrammatical sentences rarely corrected
ChildDoggie bited daddy Mother Yes, thats
right
67Theories of grammar development
1. Behavioural theory
- Evidence more contrary than supportive.
- Brown and Hanlon (1970) ? 3 findings
- Ungrammatical sentences rarely corrected
- Sentence corrected only if they are untrue
68Theories of grammar development
1. Behavioural theory
- Evidence more contrary than supportive.
- Brown and Hanlon (1970) ? 3 findings
- Ungrammatical sentences rarely corrected
- Sentence corrected only if they are untrue
Child (sees a car)Deres a truck Mother No,
thats a car
69Theories of grammar development
1. Behavioural theory
- Evidence more contrary than supportive.
- Brown and Hanlon (1970) ? 3 findings
- Ungrammatical sentences rarely corrected
- Sentence corrected only if they are untrue
- Ungrammatical requests as likely to be fulfilled
as ungrammatical requests
70Theories of grammar development
1. Behavioural theory
- Evidence more contrary than supportive.
Imitation?
71Theories of grammar development
1. Behavioural theory
- Evidence more contrary than supportive.
Imitation? Adults dont use telegraphic
speech Adults dont over-regularize verbs
72Theories of grammar development
1. Behavioural theory
- Evidence more contrary than supportive.
Imitation? Adults dont use telegraphic
speech Adults dont over-regularize verbs
73Theories of grammar development
- Nativist/linguistic perspective
- Acquisition of grammar too complex, too rapid to
be the result of learning - Poverty of the stimulus
- Chomsky Language Acquisition Device
- Genetically-specified grammatical processor
- Recent evolutionary adaptation
- Evidence?
74Theories of grammar development
1. Nativist/linguist perspective
- Cross-linguistic ? Languages of the world conform
to a Universal Grammar (Chomsky) - Genetic ? Grammatical impairments run in families
(Pinker) - Comparative ? Our closest evolutionary ancestors
(Chimps) cannot learn grammar - Dissociations ? Language and general intelligence
dissociate in Williams Syndrome - Developmental ? Grammar acquired effortlessly and
systematically
75Theories of grammar development
1. Nativist/linguist perspective Criticisms
- Cross-linguistic ? No consensus about whether a
Universal Grammar can be described - Genetic ?Defect motoric not grammatical
- Comparative ? Kanzi, timing, social context
- Dissociations ? Language in Williams Syndrome
good but not intact
76Metalinguistic Awareness
- The ability to reflect on language as an object.
- Allows individuals to consider both the meaning
and formal structure of words. - Slow to develop.
77Metalinguistic Awareness
- Papandropoulou Sinclair, 1974
- Asked 5 to 6-year-olds to give examples of long
and short words
78Metalinguistic Awareness
- Papandropoulou Sinclair, 1974
- Asked 5 to 6-year-olds to give examples of long
and short words - Examples were based on the referent rather than
the form - Long word "Train"
- Short word "Pebble"
79IV The development of language function
- Structure/function distinction.
- What language is versus how it is used.
- Language used to effect changes in others.
- Used to change behaviour, emotion, and thoughts.
- Requires a sensitivity to audience
characteristics.
80Development of function
1. Modulating others behaviour
- First reflected in use of communicative gestures
at the end of the 1st year. - Protodeclarative comment
- Protoimperative request
81Development of function
1. Modulating others behaviour
- Bruner (1983) investigated the development of 2
types of requests - Requests for
- (1) objects
- (2) social activity
82Development of function
lt 8 months ?Vocalization but no clear
referent 8-12 months ?Gestures (e.g., hand
opening and closing) help to identify
referent 16 months ?Gesture/word combinations
used to request absent objects 20 months
?Gestures drop out
1. Modulating others behaviour
- Bruner (1983) investigated the development of 2
types of requests - Requests for
- (1) objects
- (2) social activity
83Development of function
1. Modulating others behaviour
- Bruner (1983) investigated the development of 2
types of requests - Requests for
- (1) objects
- (2) social activity
84Development of function
1. Modulating others behaviour
- Bruner (1983) investigated the development of 2
types of requests - Requests for
- (1) objects
- (2) social activity
13-14 months ? Play requests (e.g., reading,
window, games, etc.) 18-19 months ? Requests for
assistance (e.g., bringing chair inside, opening
boxes etc.) . Emergence of collaborative
problem-solving
85Development of function
86Development of function
2. Modulating others emotions
- Example Humour.
- Develops in 4 stages (McGhee, 1979)
87Development of function
2. Modulating others emotions
- Example Humour.
- Develops in 4 stages (McGhee, 1979)
Stage 2
88Development of function
2. Modulating others emotions
- Example Humour.
- Develops in 4 stages (McGhee, 1979)
- Stage 2
- 24 months First verbal jokes
- Calling something by its wrong name.
- Example Calling the dog a cow.
89Development of function
2. Modulating others emotions
- Example Humour.
- Develops in 4 stages (McGhee, 1979)
Stage 4
90Development of function
2. Modulating others emotions
- Example Humour.
- Develops in 4 stages (McGhee, 1979)
- Stage 4
- 6-year-olds Increasing awareness of lexical
ambiguity (both phonological and semantic) - Example Why did Billy's aunt mail him 3 socks?
91Development of function
92Development of function
3. Modulating others thoughts
- Beginning around 2.5 - 3 years of age, children
become aware of others mental states (knowledge,
beliefs, feelings, etc.) - Important consequence for communication
- Growing realization that language can be used to
modify others mental states (e.g., deception) - Early skills very rudimentary ? E.g., Referential
communication
93Development of function
3. Modulating others thoughts
- Referential communication refers to the ability
to precisely direct the mental activity of
another person - Assessed in referential communication tasks
94Referential Communication Task
95Referential Communication Task
Pick the green one
96Referential Communication Task
What the hell?
Pick the green one
97Development of function
3. Modulating others thoughts
- Referential communication refers to the ability
to precisely direct the mental activity of
another person - Assessed in referential communication tasks
Young children are quite poor at using language
to precisely direct someone elses thinking
98Development of function
99Development of function
4. Saying what the audience wants to hear
- Pragmatics The ability to appropriately tailor a
spoken message in light of contextual demands.
100Development of function
4. Saying what the audience wants to hear
- Pragmatics The ability to appropriately tailor a
spoken message in light of contextual demands.
Example 1 Are listeners paying attention?
101Development of function
4. Saying what the audience wants to hear
- Pragmatics The ability to appropriately tailor a
spoken message in light of contextual demands.
Example 1 Are listeners paying
attention? Wellman Lempers, 1977 ? Even
2-year-olds use a variety of strategies to ensure
that their audience is listening
102Development of function
4. Saying what the audience wants to hear
- Pragmatics The ability to appropriately tailor a
spoken message in light of contextual demands.
103Development of function
4. Saying what the audience wants to hear
- Pragmatics The ability to appropriately tailor a
spoken message in light of contextual demands.
Example 2 How old is the listener?
104Development of function
4. Saying what the audience wants to hear
- Pragmatics The ability to appropriately tailor a
spoken message in light of contextual demands.
Example 2 How old is the listener? Dunn, 1988 ?
Like adults, 2 and 3-year-olds use a different
tone of voice when talking to infants than to
older children or adults.
105Development of function
4. Saying what the audience wants to hear
- Pragmatics The ability to appropriately tailor a
spoken message in light of contextual demands.
106Development of function
4. Saying what the audience wants to hear
- Pragmatics The ability to appropriately tailor a
spoken message in light of contextual demands.
Example 3 Being polite Bock Hornsby, 1981?
Older children more likely than younger children
to use please when asking for things
107Development of function
4. Saying what the audience wants to hear
- Pragmatics The ability to appropriately tailor a
spoken message in light of contextual demands. - Conclusion
108Development of function
4. Saying what the audience wants to hear
- Pragmatics The ability to appropriately tailor a
spoken message in light of contextual demands. - Conclusion Considerable social-linguistic
competence evidenced early in development
109Development of function Theories
- Learning theory
- Operant conditioning and modeling important for
shaping politeness, manners. - Evidence?
- Grief Gleason, 1980 ? Most parents prompt and
model the use of please and thank you
110Development of function Theories
- Cognitive perspective
- Emphasize advances in childrens theory of mind
and working memory for effective use of language
111Development of function Theories
- Nativist perspective
- Karmiloff-Smith, et al. 1995 ? Suggest the
existence of a social module. - Face processing, language and TOM
- Innate cognitive mechanism that supports
social-linguistic functioning. - Evidence of preservation in Williams syndrome and
impairment in autism.
112Summary
- Language must be studied both structurally and
functionally. - Many theories about how language develops.
- Each has some specific relevance.