Title: Language
1Language
- Language is a form of communication in which
sounds and symbols are combined according to
formal rules - Language Acquisition is the process of learning
language and its rules and structures
2Animal Language
- Animals are capable of limited communication
- Language in animals is not comparable to human
language - Apes lack appropriate vocal cords for generation
of speech - Apes can be trained to use non-vocal sign
language - Washoe acquired American Sign Language
- Dolphins can be trained to respond to hand
signals and to vocal commands - Animal language lacks complexity and syntax
3Theories of Language Development
- Is language capability innate or learned?
- Most researchers believe that language
acquisition is a combination of nature and
nurture. - Language Acquisition Device- an innate mechanism,
hypothesized by Chomsky, that enables a child to
analyze language and extract the basic rules of
grammar
4Movie
5Elements of Language
- Phoneme
- Basic speech sound
- Initial consonant in rake versus lake
6Elements of Language contd
- Morphemes
- Smallest unit of language that have meaning
- Types of morphemes
- Free morphemes can stand alone
- Cat
- Danger
- Bound morphemes cannot stand alone and always
attach to free morphemes - -ness in happiness
- un- in unclear
- -ing in swinging
7Elements of Grammar
- Syntax
- The structure of language
- Grammar Parts of speech and rules for combining
words - Word order Spot bit Abby differs from Abby
bit Spot - Semantics
- The study of meaning
8Development of Language Abilities
- Prelinguistic Sound Production
- Crying (0-2 months)
- Cooing (1-5 months)
- Takes same form in all languages
- Is done by all babies
- Babbling (5-12 months)
- Vocal play (single syllables)
- Reduplicated babbling
- Nonreduplicated babbling (more complex sounds)
- Deaf babies and babbling
- Hearing speech is not necessary for babbling
- Deaf babies babble manually if exposed to sign
language
9Early Expressions of Communicative Intent
- Protowords (end of first year)
- Many first words
- Are not real words because they are used in only
1 context - Baby points to object of interest and says ha
- Characteristics that suggest communication is
intentional - Child makes eye contact with adults
- Child vocalizes with consistent sounds and
intonation patterns - Child persists in attempting to communicate if
not understood
10Early Expressions of Communicative Intent contd
- One-word utterances
- Appear in most children between 10-15 months but
sometimes not until 2 - Typical Early Words
- Familiar objects or people
- Daddy
- ball
- Social words
- bye-bye
- uh-oh
11Early Expressions of Communicative Intent
- Two word utterances and beyond
- Typically appear around 18-20 months of age
- Telegraphic speech
- Most obvious and essential part of ideas are
conveyed - ride car rather than I want to go riding in
the car - Few function words like a, the, of
- Few bound morphemes like s or ing
- Adult word order is usually maintained
12Word Learning
- Associating words with concepts in the world
- objects, actions, abstract notions, etc...
- Poses 2 problems
- 1. Extension Figuring out what aspects of the
world people are talking about - 2. Intension Figuring out what people mean when
they use word-referent links
13Extension Mapping words to objects
- Seems like it would be straightforward
- Child sees something and then hears a word
- Associative learning!
- Evidence Children learn more words when parents
follow-in to their childs attentional focus
14Problems with dumb associative learning
- Parents dont always follow-in
- 30-50 of the time, children are looking at
something OTHER than whats being labeled by
speaker. - Discrepant Labeling
- In some cultures, people dont speak directly to
children - But, word learning is not necessarily delayed
15Finding the meaning
- Even when its clear what part of the world a
speaker is talking about, its unclear what the
meaning is - Quines problem of Indeterminacy
- Infinite number of logical possibilities for the
meaning of a given word
16Indeterminacy Gavagai
Gavagai!
Frog? Green? Ugly? Jumping?
173 Constraints on word learning
- Whole-object constraint
- Assume words refer to whole objects instead of
parts or properties - Taxonomic constraint
- Assume that words you know extend to similar
KINDS of things - Mutual Exclusivity
- Assume that words refer to one and only one object
18Learning the rules of language
- Syntax
- Knowledge about how words go together to form
sentences - word order
- Morphology
- Understanding of how to change words to make them
mean different things - Verb inflection Past-tense
19Do children know the rules?
- One test of early morphology
- Berko-Gleasons wug test
- This is a wug, and these are 2 ______?
20Past-tense learning
- Regular Verbs
- Ones in which the past-tense is formed via a
regular rule (e.g., add -ed) - Irregular Verbs
- Ones where the past-tense is a change in the word
(e.g., run-ran speak-spoke)
21Development of irregular past tense production
- When children first learn, surprisingly they do
it right - Will say ran for past tense of run
- But then they overregularize
- Will say runned for past tense of run
- This suggests theyve learned the rule and
over-apply it - Then, they slowly acquire the irregulars
Memorization.
22- Childs words dont always match adults words
- Overextension
- Using a single word to mean many different things
- ball to refer to anything round or that can be
thrown - kitty to refer to any small animal, such as a
turtle - Underextension
- Using words in an overly specific way
- Using dog only for golden retrievers
- Using kitty only for their cat and not for all
cats
23Language The case of Genie
- Severely abused child discovered in LA in the
mid-70s - No exposure to language between 13-20 months, and
13 years - Upon discovery, very little language
- Small set of words
- Understood some intonation stuff (e.g.,
prohibitions, questioning) - The big question Can she learn language?
24The Genie Results (Curtiss, 1977)
- Trouble breathing and talking at same time
- She developed a large vocabulary
- Could use meaningful combinations of words
- Grammatical abilities severely impoverished
- Lots of trouble learning the rules of language
- Pragmatic skills also poor