Title: Chapter 10: Language in Context
1Chapter 10 Language in Context
2Some Questions of Interest
- How does language affect the way we think?
- How does our social context influence our use of
language? - How can we find out about language by studying
the human brain?
3Language Affects Cognition Perception, Memory
4Linguistic Universals
- Color naming
- All languages use a set of 11 color names in
hierarchical order - Black/white
- Red
- Yellow/green/blue
- Brown
- Purple/pink/orange/gray
5Language on perception demo
6Language Affects Memory
- Washing clothes
- Leading questions in eyewitness testimony
7Linguistic Relativity
- Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
- Strong interpretation Thoughts and behavior are
determined by language - More evidence against than for
- Milder interpretationThoughts and behavior are
influenced by language
8Linguistic Relativity Studies
- Bilinguals maintain that they think differently
in different languages (Wierzbicka, 1985) - Differences in lexicons support lexical
relativity when language differences lead to
differing mental structures - But Eskimos dont really have words for snow
9Grammatical Gender
- Memory
- Taught Spanish and German speakers object-name
pairs (e.g., apple-Patrick) - remembered object-name pairs better when the
gender of the proper name given to an object was
consistent with the grammatical gender of the
object - Perception
- Masculine in German, feminine in Spanish
- German hard, heavy, jagged, metal, serrated
- Spanish golden, intricate, little, lovely, shiny
-
10Bilingual Studies
- Additive bilinguals
- Learn a second language without loss to the
native language - Subtractive bilinguals
- Learn a second language that interferes with the
native language - Simultaneous bilingual
- Learn two languages from birth
- Sequential bilinguals
- First learn one language and then another
11Factors Influencing Bilingualism Fluency
- The earlier in life a second language is learned,
the more fluent the speaker will become - Bahrick colleagues disagree
- Vocabulary and fluency is acquired just as well
in older participants but not fluency
12Bilingual Studies
- Research showing advantages
- enhanced executive functions
- delayed onset of dementia
- acquire more expertise in their own language
- sensitive to subtle aspects of language
- perform better on tests of nonverbal intelligence
that require recognition of verbal patterns
13Bilingual Studies
- Research showing disadvantages
- have smaller vocabularies
- access to lexical items in memory is slower
14Pidgins and Creoles
- Pidgins
- Communication between two language groups
- between immigrants and locals or missionaries and
natives in order to be understood by each other
without having to learn the language of the other
group
- Creoles
- are complete languages
- Does have native speakers
- Has developed through expansion form and grammar
- Is stable and autonomous in its norms
15Dialects
- A regional variety of a language distinguished by
features such as vocabulary, syntax, and
pronunciation
16Spalking in Toonerisms
- Chipping the flannel
- Box in the Jack
- Your model is renosed
- shaking my tower
- Mardon me, Padam
- the cricking of the chirpets
- my stickers were fingy
- heat seaters
17Slips of the Tongue
- Errors can occur at any stage of speech
production - Phoneme exchange
- At the lead of spite
- Go and shake a tower
- Word-level error
- I have to fill up my gas with car
- Once I stop I cannot start
- Your model is renosed
18Figurative Uses of Language
- Metaphor
- Two nouns placed together to note similarities
- Argument is war
- Theories are buildings
- Ideas are food
- Similes introduce the words like or as into a
comparison between items
19Figurative Uses of Language
- Metaphor
- Argument is war
- Theories are buildings
- Ideas are food
- Four key elements
- Tenor
- Vehicle
- Ground
- Tension
20Mixed metaphors
- A bird in hand is better than two burning in the
bush - Up the creek without a canoe
- Well burn that bridge before we get to it.
- Strike while the iron is in the fire.
21Pragmatics
- Knowing what to say, how to say it, and when to
say it or how to be around other people (Bowen,
2001) - Study of discourse and conversational skills
- Situational determinants of the use of language
22Pragmatic Skills
- Establish common ground
- Introduce a topic in order for the listener to
fully understand - Maintaining a topic
- Or change topic appropriately
- Or interrupt politely
- Appropriate eye contact
- Not too much staring
- Not too much looking away
23Speech Acts
- Five basic categories
- Representative conveys info
- I like polar bears.
- Directive is order or request that causes
behavior - Turn on the air conditioner.
- Commissive is a promise/agreement to do something
- I will make the cookies.
- Expressive conveys information about inner state
- I enjoy spending time with you.
- Declaration is a statement that brings about new
situation - I am now a vegetarian.
24Social context affects speech act choices
- Bob is a junior executive for a fairly large
corporation. He is on friendly terms with John,
the company president, and they occasionally have
lunch together. A few days earlier, they had both
attended a company board meeting during which
John had made a presentation. The presentation
had not gone well and was obviously not well
thought out. A few days later, Bob and John are
alone and having lunch together when John says to
Bob, What did you think of the presentation that
I gave to the board the other morning?
25Research on Speech Acts
- Which of the following responses would you give?
- Direct and true I really didnt think your
presentation was very good. - Direct and false I really thought your
presentation was very good. - Indirect evasive question Dont you think we
should have our board meeting on some other day
than Monday? - Evasive assertion I think we should have our
board meeting on some day other than Monday. - Indirect irrelevant question Wasnt that latest
stock market rally sure a surprise? - Irrelevant assertion The latest stock market
rally was sure a surprise.
26Indirect Speech
- Direct speech
- Open the window.
- Indirect speech
- Could you open the window?
- It sure is hot in here.
27Pinkers Theory of Indirect Speech
- Indirect speech can serve three purposes
- Plausible deniability
- Relationship negotiation
- Language as a digital medium of indirect as well
as direct communication
28Conversational Postulates
29Gender Differences in Language
- Girls tend to talk about one topic
- Girls talk face to face
- Women tend to overlap and finish each others
sentences
- Boys tease, tell jokes, notice things around the
room, talk about finding games to play - Boys talk at angles, eyes straight ahead
- Men perceive this as an interruption, intrusion,
or lack of attention
30Animal Language
31Grey Parrots
- Labels for more than 35 objects (e.g., paper,
key, wood, cork, etc.) - Functional use of No
- Phrases such as I want X, Wanna go Y, where X and
Y are appropriate words - Labels for 7 colors
- Can identify number of items up to 6
- Alex can use vocabulary to identify proficiently,
request, refuse, categorize, and quantify more
than 100 different objects
32Washoe
- Washoe was able to use term more appropriately
in different contexts - First use was more tickling
- Transferred the sign dog to the sound of barking
by an unseen dog - Washoe adopted an infant named Loulis
- No humans signed in front of infant chimp
- Loulis still managed to learn over 50 signs from
other chimpanzees - No active teaching, rather Loulis just learned
through observation among other signing chimps
33Nim Chimpsky
- Believed that apes only used signs to get rewards
from trainers - Raised Nim in a human-like setting
- Nim learned many words like dirty, sleep, bite,
and angry - Nim did not learn to combine words to create new
meaning on his own - After the experiments he continued to sign his
most-used signs seemed to be drink, gum, banana,
and more
34Koko
- Patterson raising gorilla named Koko since 1972
- Has a greater vocabulary than Nim
- Uses more words per utterances
- Koko uses structure, is creative and spontaneous
in her language - Koko has a vocabulary of over 1,000 signs, and
understands even more spoken English - Koko invented her own new compound signs (e.g.,
finger-bracelet for ring)
35Neuropsychology of Language
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37Neuropsychology of Language
- Brain and semantics
- ventral temporal lobes, including middle and
inferior temporal, anterior fusiform, and
anterior parahippocampal gyri - the angular gyrus
- the anterior aspect (pars orbitalis) of the
inferior frontal gyrus - the dorsal prefrontal cortex
- the posterior cingulate gyrus
38Neuropsychology of Language
- Brain and syntax
- ERP called P600 occurs after hearing a sentence
with syntactic violations - ERP called N400 occurs after hearing a sentence
related to semantic violations
39Neuropsychology of Language
- Brain and sign language
- The locations of lesions that would be expected
to disrupt speech also disrupt signing - All right-handers with signing deficits show
left-hemisphere lesions, as do most left-handers - Some left-handers with signing deficits show
right-hemisphere lesions
40Neuropsychology of Language
- Aphasia
- Impaired language function due to brain damage
- Wernickes
- Brocas
- Global
- Anomic
41Normal vs. Wernickes Aphasia
42Normal vs. Brocas Aphasia
43Neuropsychology of Language Autism
- Abnormal social, language, and cognition
behaviors - Sex differences in brains
- Extreme male brain
- Executive dysfunction theory
- Problem with frontal lobes