Title: Introduction to Cognitive Science: Linguistics Segment
1Introduction to Cognitive Science Linguistics
Segment
- Lecture 1
- September 15, 2005.
- (2.00 p.m. 3.50 p.m.)
- Venue Meng Wah Complex Room 324
- Lecturer Dr. A. B. Bodomo
- Department of Linguistics
- ltabbodomo_at_hku.hkgt
2Course Outline and heuristics
- Refer to Course Outline
- course objectives
- format of teaching
- reading materials
- assignments
- study questions
3Linguistics as Cognitive Science
- Cognitive science is a relatively new discipline
that investigates the way the human mind
functions and how computers can simulate these
functions. The human mind is a complex system
that receives, stores, processes and sends out
information. All this involves cognition, which
refers to perceiving and knowing. - Language is an important part of this cognitive
process of receiving, storing, transforming and
sending out information. We often hear or read
information, store what we hear or read in order
to remember it, and process this information
before telling, or writing to, someone about it. - Linguistics is the science of language, and is
thus the part of cognitive science that addresses
issues of language learning, production, and
understanding. Students of cognitive science need
to have a good grasp of this central aspect of
the discipline. - To this end, in the linguistics component of this
introduction to cognitive science, we will
address issues that center on the nature of
language, its key properties and components, and
how it is learnt and used in various contexts.
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5Many Approaches to Linguistics
- Diachronic/historical approaches how languages
change over time - Sociological approaches how languages vary
according to different classes of speakers - Mentalistic/cognitive approaches an
investigation of language as a product of the
mind i.e. language as a cognitive process - Descartes
- Chomsky
- So how is reality represented through natural
language? At which levels of language can we
conceptualise objects and concepts?
6Pronunciation Level of Phonetics/Phonology
7Word Form/ Structure Level of Morphology
- Two morphemes white and dove
- Cantonese (Hong Kong Chinese)
- hoeng1 gong2 dak6 bit6 hang4 zing3 keoi1 'The
Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) - hoeng1 gong2 wui6 ji5 zin2 laam5 zung1 sam1
- The Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition
Centre
8Phrase/ Sentence Structure Level of Syntax
- (1) Who did you see Chan with?
- (2)Who did you see Chan and?
- (3) ngo5 heoi3 zung1 waan4
- (4) heoi3 zung1 waan4
- (5)zung1 waan4 heoi3 ngo5
- WHITE DOVE
- PS rule
- NP ? A N
- Tree diagram
-
NP A N
white dove
9Meaning Level of Semantics
What does the sign, white dove, mean? Signifier
and signified Reality, Mind, etc.
- Cantonese
- a. me1 waa2 ?
- could mean
- b. What did you say ?
- c. What language ?
- English
- a. Chan loves you more than Yan.
- could mean
- b. Chan loves you more than Yan loves you.
- c. Chan loves you more than Chan loves Yan.
10MeaningLevel of Pragmatics
- What would white dove mean in some specialized
contexts, cultures, etc.? - Pragmatics meaning in context
- Its hot!!
11Topics in the linguistics component
- PHONOLOGY
- MORPHOLOGY
- SYNTAX
- SEMANTICS
- LANGUAGE and LITERACY ACQUISITION
12Introduction to Cognitive ScienceLinguistics
Component
- Topic 1
- Phonology and Morphology
13Keywords
- morphology
- inflectional morphology
- derivational morphology
- morph
- morpheme
- morphophonology
- morphophoneme
- Phonology
- phonetics
- phone
- phoneme
- tone
- stress
- toneme
- tonology
14Introduction
- Theme
- A survey of how linguistic knowledge at the level
of phonology and morphology is represented and
computed in the minds of speakers of a language. - Objective
- an understanding of the basic terms and issues in
phonology and morphology - an interface approach rather than rigidly
discussing these issues from phonology,
morphology, syntax and semantics, we will look at
how phonology interfaces with morphology and how
syntax interfaces with semantics.
15Phonology
- A field of cognitive science that investigates
how sound systems of a language are represented
in the minds of speakers - Stillings et al (1995220) gives a concise
specification of what phonological knowledge as
represented in the minds of speakers is - The phonological component of a grammar consists
of a list of the words of that language, with the
pronunciation of each word given as a faithful
acoustic image coupled with direct instructions
to the vocal tract about how to produce that
image, and instructions to the perceptual system
about how to recognize it.
16Phonetics and Phonology A distinction
- Phonology
- how a set of the sounds produced by the vocal
tract are organized into meaningful sound units
in each language
- Phonetics
- a science that deals with the articulatory and
acoustic properties of sounds produced by the
vocal tract
17Phonetics and Phonology (contd)
- IPA chart (please refer to your own copy)
- For instance, given a list of sounds that can be
produced by the vocal tract, such as in the IPA
chart (Phonetics), only a set of these sounds are
meaningful in each of English, Cantonese and
Dagaare (Phonology).
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19Sets of meaningful sounds in English, Cantonese,
and Dagaare
These meaningful sound units are called phonemes.
20Phonemes
- Concrete sounds or phones give us the abstract
concept phoneme a minimal meaningful sound unit - basic units in phonology
- phoneme
- allophone
- phonemes in WHITE DOVE as conceptualised/
represented in the minds of speakers - / / / / / / / / / / /
/ ? / /
21Allophones
- Variants of a phoneme
- Examples
- English
- p and ph as in / / stop and
/phit/ pit - Cantonese
- n and l as in /nei5/ and /lei5/ you
- Dagaare
- h and z as in / / and /
/ yesterday
22Minimal pairs
- Method for identifying phonemes - analysing
minimal pairs - a minimal pair a pair of words that are
identical except for a contrast in ONE sound .
- Examples in English, Cantonese, and Dagaare
- English
- /sip/ ? /s/, /tip/ ? /t/
- /pit/ ? /p/, /bit/ ? /b/
- Dagaare
- / / to enclose ? /l/
- / / to pull ? /t/
23Suprasegmental phonemes Tone and Stress
- Tone
- meaningful pitch variations on syllables
- Stress
- the amount of force used in pronouncing a syllable
Stress and Tone can indicate differences in
meaning among pairs of words
24Word stress in English
- Syllables may be stressed or unstressed in
English, and some variations of stress on
syllables of a word may cause differences in
meaning. - Teachers in this course are going to ensure an
'increase of marks for cognitive science
students. - Teachers in this course are so kind that they
will in'crease your marks.
25Tone in Cantonese
- Cantonese TONES
- 6 tonemes
- high (tone 1), high rising (2), mid level (3),
low falling (4), low rising (5), low level (6)
26Tone in Dagaare
- Two tonemes - high and low
27Phonological rules
- /Underlying phonological representations/
-
- Phonological rules
-
- Phonetic representation
28Phonological rules in English, Cantonese, and
Dagaare
- English
- /p/ ? ph /
- a stop is aspirated in word initial position.
- pit but phit
- Dagaare
- a /d/ becomes r in secondary syllable position
- dide but dire eating
29Morphology
- the field of cognitive science which studies how
knowledge about the form or internal structure of
words are represented and processed in the minds
of speakers. - divided into two main parts, inflectional
morphology and derivational morphology - Basic units of morphology morpheme, allomorph
30Morphemes
- A morpheme is a minimal distinctive unit of
grammar (Crystal 1997). A morpheme is an abstract
term that must be captured by a concrete
realization, the morph discrete speech unit
e.g. white dove - In morphology we represent units with braces.
- white doves
- Free morpheme white dove (these can stand on
their own) - Bound morpheme (-those that must be attached to
another morpheme e.g. s)
31Morphology (contd.)
- inflectional morphology and derivational
morphology. - Inflectional morphology knowledge through which
speakers of a language create several paradigms
of the same word to express various grammatical
categories like number, person, tense, aspect,
case, and gender
Number in English paper paper-s dog
dog-z prize prize-iz
But also child child-ren foot
feet sheep sheep zero morph
The various plural variations are said to be
allomorphs of the same plural morpheme.
32Examples of inflectional morphemes (contd.)
- Person and number in French
- Je mang-e I eat
- Tu mang-es You eat
- Il mang-e He/she/it eat
- Nous mang-eons we eat
- Vous mang-ez You (pl) eat
- Ils mang-ent They eat
- Aspect in Cantonese
- maai5
- buy maai5-zo2
- has bought
- wan2 play
- wan2-gan2
- is playing
33Derivational morphology
- Derivational morphology or word formation
morphology on the other hand, is concerned with
the speaker knowledge that underlies processes
that form new words out of existing ones by
adding various affixes, which are pieces of
words.
- English Causative verbs from nouns and
adjectives - energy energ-ize
- sterile steril-ize
- penal penal-ize
34Examples of derivational morphemes (contd)
- Cantonese
- zai2 (little/small) as in
- dang3 zai2 (small chair),
- syu1 zai2 (booklet)
- toei2 zai2 (small table)
- Dagaare agentive nouns from verbs
- di to eat - di-raa eater some one who
can eat a lot - zo to run zo-raa runner, athlete
- roam
-
-
- roamer, tourist
35Morphophonology
- While it is possible to talk of phonology and
morphology independently, in reality, knowledge
about these two areas are intertwined, and
speakers process these as such. - Sometimes, speakers represent knowledge about
phonemes (meaningful sound units) based on
knowledge about some grammatical environments.
36Morphophonologyor morphophonemics, as it is
known in North America
- the aspect of cognitive science that studies the
classification of phonological aspects of
knowledge representation based on knowledge about
the grammatical aspects that affect these
phonological representations and vice versa. - Morphophoneme
- in parallel with a phoneme. While phonemes are
written surrounded by slashes / /, morphophonemes
are surrounded by braces . They are often
written in CAPITALS (Crystal 1997).
37Morphophonemic examples in English
- phonologically unpredictable singular plural
alternation of words - Knife knives
- Thief thieves
- But NOT of
- Chief chieves (chiefs)
- The morphophoneme F would then have
morphoallophones like f for singular and v
for plural of these words. - Hence the need to emphasize their
interrelationship.
38Other examples of morphophonological phenomena
- Word or lexical stress is a morphophonemic
operation - Example in describing the rules of
pronunciation we often appeal to positions of the
word in which the sound is - aspiration in English a voiceless stop in word
initial position is aspirated, elsewhere i.e. in
word median and word final, it is unaspirated.
This is not just a phonological rule but a
morphophenemic rule.
39Conclusion
- Phonology and morphology are two salient aspects
of the tacit knowledge of speakers of a language.
It is at these levels of mental representations
that speakers capture the sounds and structure of
words and other minimal meaningful units of
speech. - An interface approach emphasizes that these two
must not be separated into watertight
compartments, but must recognize that there is an
intimate interrelationship between them. This
interrelationship is explored in the cognitive
area of morphophonology. - Morphology can also interface with syntax to give
us morphosyntax. Syntax is going to be one of the
topics of discussion in the next lecture.
40References
- Crystal, David. 1997. A Dictionary of Linguistics
and Phonetics. Blackwell Publishers. - Lepore, Ernest and Zenon Pylyshyn (eds). 1999.
What Is Cognitive Science. Blackwell Publishers.
(especially chapters 10, 11, 12, and 13). - Stillings, Neil and others. 1995. Cognitive
Science An Introduction. MIT Press. (especially
chapters 6). - Trask, R. L. 1993. A Dictionary of Grammatical
Terms in Linguistics. Routledge. - Wilson, R. and Frank C. Neil (eds) 1999. The MIT
Encyclopedia of the Cognitive Sciences. MIT Press
41Introduction to Cognitive ScienceLinguistics
Component
- Topic 2
- Syntax and Semantics
42Keywords
- constituent structure
- functional structure
- semantics
- pragmatics
- morphosyntax
- syntax-semantics interface
- ambiguity
- Syntax
- the mental lexicon
- phrase
- noun phrase (NP)
- verb phrase (VP)
- phrase structure
- sentence structure
- tree diagram
43Introduction theme and objective
- Theme
- A survey of how linguistic knowledge at the level
of syntax and semantics is represented in the
minds of speakers of a language. - Objective
- an understanding of the basic terms and issues in
syntax and semantics/pragmatics - an interface approach rather than rigidly
discussing these issues from phonology,
morphology, syntax and semantics, we will look at
how syntax interfaces with semantics.
44Syntax
- deals with the combination of words to form
phrases and sequences. - What are the principles that determine ways we
can or cannot combine some words to form
sentences? - For example, why are some of these sentences
correct and others wrong? - Who did you see Mary with?
- Who did you see Mary and ?
- Ngo5 heoi3 zung1 waan4 Im going to Central
- Heoi3 zung1 waan4
- Zung1 waan4 heoi3 ngo5
45- Syntacticians, or cognitive scientists working on
syntax, attempt to capture this knowledge by
positing rules. - Consider the situation whereby a speaker of
English, Cantonese or Dagaare wants to express
the conceptual notion of drinking water in
English, Cantonese or Dagaare. - The first step is presumably to search in a
database of words in their respective languages
for the appropriate words to express the
situation.
Let us call this the mental lexicon.
46The mental lexicon of a language
- a database containing a list of all the words in
the language, along with information about their
grammatical category, how they combine with other
words and ,of course, their meaning.
47Simplified lexicons of English, Cantonese, and
Dagaare(each containing words that would express
the conceptual notion of a man having drunk water
)
English The man drank water. drank, verb,
trans. having ingested water through the
mouth man, noun, count, an adult male human
being the, article, DEF. water, noun, mass a
kind of liquid
48Phrase Structure
- From the database of lexical items that would
form the building blocks of linguistic structure
expressing the conceptual notion, the next step
is to group the words such that they would
express the entities that take part in the action
and the action itself. - We would refer to this group of words as phrases,
a phrase being defined as a structured group of
words. - Phrases have heads, a head of a phrase is the
most important word in the phrase. Phrases take
their names after the name of their heads. So a
noun phrase (NP) is headed by a noun, verb phrase
(VP) by a verb, etc. - The man is an NP, drank water is a VP.
Indeed, a VP can contain an NP, water, which just
has only one item.
49Sentence Structure
- words we need to express a situation are selected
from our mental lexicon. - we have successfully grouped them into phrases
and units to express entities and events.
- we are ready to put these words to form complete
strings expressing the conceptual situation. This
is the domain of sentence analysis. We begin by
positing phrase structure rules.
50Phrase Structure rules
- With these phrase structure rules and the lexicon
attached the native speaker can form or interpret
grammatical sentences and reject ungrammatical
ones. - (In groups of two, spend at most 3 minutes and
come up with phrase rules for Cantonese and
Dagaare to express the conceptual situation of a
man having drank water.)
- S ? NP VP
- VP ? V NP
- NP ? Art N
- V ? drank
- N ? man, water
- Art ? the
51A constituent structure diagram in the form of a
tree structure
The first NP functions as the SUBJECT of the
sentence, the verb as the PREDICATE and the
second NP as the OBJECT. This can be represented
in a functional structure diagram
52Functional structure diagram
- This is how we represent the syntactic knowledge
of speakers of a language for basic sentences.
There are however more complex cases.
An account of the syntax alone is not enough for
an adequate interpretation of sentences that
encode concepts, situations and attitudes. We
need a level of meaning to achieve this.
53Meaning level of semantics/ pragmatics
- What does the sign, white dove, mean? Signifier
and signified - Reality, mind, etc
- This will be taken care of by semantics and
pragmatics
54Semantics
- Trask (1999 249)
- the branch of linguistics dealing with meanings
of words and sentences.
- Crystal (1997 343)
- a major branch of linguistics devoted to the
study of MEANING in language.
55Meaning Level of Semantics
- English
- a. Chan loves you more than Yan.
- could mean
- b. Chan loves you more than Yan loves you.
- c. Chan loves you more than Chan loves Yan.
- Cantonese
- a. me1 waa2 ?
- could mean
- b. What did you say ?
- c. What language ?
56Meaning Level of Pragmatics
- Crystal (1997 301)
- the study of language from the point of view of
the users, especially of the choices they make,
the constraints they encounter in using language
in social interaction, and the effects their use
of language has on the other participants in an
act of communication.
- What would white dove mean in some specialised
contexts, cultures, etc.? - What about a black tie?
57Syntax and how it interfaces with other components
- Morphosyntax
- The syntax-semantics interface
58Syntax and Its Interfaces (Morphology)
- Interface with morphology
- ? morphosyntax
- There is a close relationship between the
structure of words and the structure of
sentences. - In some languages it is even difficult to tell
whether a particular word formation is a word or
a sentence
59Syntax and Its Interfaces (Morphology)
- Swahili (a language of East Africa)
- ninakupenda
- Is a word that is made up of
- ni- na- ku - penda I
Tense you love - (The item na- in this language marks tense.)
- In this language, this word structure can also
stand as a sentence, thus - Ninakupenda 'I love you'
60Morphosyntax (contd.)
In the data above, it is better to analyse this
linguistic item both in terms of its morphology
and syntax, hence morphosyntax.
- Trask (1999176)
- the area of interface between morphology and
syntax.
- Crystal (1997250-251)
- grammatical categories or properties for whose
definition criteria of morphology and syntax both
apply, as in describing the characteristics of
words - E.g. NUMBER in nouns constitute a morphosyntactic
category - number contrasts affect syntax (e.g. singular
subject requiring a singular verb) - they require morphological definition (e.g. add
-s for plural)
61The Syntax-semantics Interface
- Besides studying the formal structure of
sentences it is also important to study how parts
of the sentence contribute to an interpretation
of the whole sentence. - Such is especially the case with syntactically
ambiguous sentences - Chan loves you more than Yan .
- Could mean
- i. Chan loves you more than Yan loves you .
- ii. Chan loves you more than Chan loves Yan.
- Class should look for more syntactic ambiguities
in English, Cantonese, and any other language - e.g. I hit the man with a book.
62Conclusion
- We have briefly shown how tacit linguistic
knowledge can be represented at various levels of
phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics,
pragmatics, and their interfaces, including
morphophonology, morphosyntax, and the
syntax-semantics interrelationships. - In the next lecture/topic, we shall look closely
at how this linguistic knowledge representation
can be formalised into an algorithm, a
computational procedure for processing this
linguistic knowledge.
63References
- Crystal, David. 1997. A Dictionary of Linguistics
and Phonetics. Blackwell Publishers. - Lepore, Ernest and Zenon Pylyshyn (eds). 1999.
What Is Cognitive Science. Blackwell Publishers.
(especially chapters 10, 11, 12, and 13). - Stillings, Neil and others. 1995. Cognitive
Science An Introduction. MIT Press. (especially
chapters 6). - Trask, R. L. 1993. A Dictionary of Grammatical
Terms in Linguistics. Routledge. - Wilson, R. and Frank C. Neil (eds) 1999. The MIT
Encyclopedia of the Cognitive Sciences. MIT Press
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