Title: Language
1Language
2Word Meanings are Organized in Semantic Networks
Evidence comes from semantic priming in lexical
decision tasks
3Word Meanings are Organized in Semantic Networks
4Dual Routes to Reading
- How do we translate written text into a verbal
code? - Evidence exists for two routes
- Grapheme-to-phoneme translation
- Patients with surface dyslexia misread words with
irregular pronunciations (e.g. say heed for
head) - Direct access to the mental lexicon
- Patients with deep dyslexia cannot read non-words
(.e.g. grimp), but can read even very difficult
words they know correctly (e.g. chrysanthemum)
5Aphasia
6Aphasia
Brocas Aphasia
Wernickes Aphasia
7Aphasia
- Wernickes aphasia
- Brocas aphasia
8Wernicke-Geschwind Aphasia Model
9PET support for the Broca/Wernicke distinction
between language production/comprehension
10Anomia (video)
11Cortical Representationof Word Meanings?
12Cortical Representationof Word Meanings?
Can you think of why word meanings might be
represented in these areas specifically?
13Whorf-Sapir
- The Whorf-Sapir hypothesis
- The categories and types that we isolate from
the world of phenomena we do not find there
because they stare every observer in the face. On
the contrary the world is presented in a
kaleidoscopic flux of impression which have to be
organized in our minds. This means, largely, by
the linguistic system in our minds. (Whorf,
1956) - In other words that our language impacts upon the
organization in our minds that is, on the
structure of cognition
14Whorf-Sapir
- Butis it true?
- Most work has been in the domain of color
- English speakers rate colors close to the
green-blue boundary as being more different than
do speakers of Taramuhara, which lacks a
linguistic distinction between green and blue
(Kay Kempton, 1984, American Anthropologist) - Is it just me, or is this not particularly
interesting? - So what is interesting?
15Whorf-Sapir
Russian has a linguistic distinction between
light and dark blues, whereas English does not.
Winawer et. al., 2006, PNAS
16Whorf-Sapir
English Speakers
Russian Speakers
Winawer et. al., 2006, PNAS
17Whorf-Sapir
- Most languages use spatial metaphors to talk
about time - In English, these metaphors are horizontal
- Hes ahead of his time
- Were behind schedule
- We moved the meeting forward
- We pushed the deadline back
- In Mandarin, these metaphors can also be vertical
- Earlier events are up, and later events are down
18Whorf-Sapir
Boroditsky, 2001, Cogn Psychol
19Whorf-Sapir
Example Primes
Boroditsky, 2001, Cogn Psychol
20Whorf-Sapir
Boroditsky, 2001, Cogn Psychol
21Whorf-Sapir
Mandarin-English bilinguals
Boroditsky, 2001, Cogn Psychol
22Whorf-Sapir
- Finally, many languages employ grammatical gender
for nouns (e.g. French, Spanish, German, and
Russian) - Boroditsky et al. (submitted) showed pictures of
objects paired with pictures of people and asked
Spanish and German speakers to rate how similar
they were - All the objects were chosen so they had opposite
grammatical gender in Spanish and German - Subjects showed the expected effect even given
the identical person/object pairings, people said
that objects with a particular grammatical gender
in their native language were more similar to
people of that gender
23The Ape Language Debate
- An ape using language?
- But
- And
- Heres what happened about 25 years ago
24 Freq.play me 375me Nim 328tickle me
316eat Nim 302more eat 287me eat
237Nim eat 209finish hug 187drink Nim
143more tickle 136sorry hug 123
Nims Most Frequent Two-Sign Combinations
Freq. tickle Nim 107hug Nim 106 more
drink 99eat drink 98banana me 97Nim
me 89sweet Nim 85me play 81gum eat 79tea
drink 77grape eat 74hug me 74banana Nim 73
25 Freq.eat drink eat drink 15eat Nim
eat Nim 7banana Nim banana Nim 5drink Nim
drink Nim 5banana eat me Nim 4banana me eat
banana 4banana me Nim me 4grape eat Nim
eat 4Nim eat Nim eat 4play me Nim play 4
Nims Most Frequent 4-sign Expressions
drink eat drink eat 3drink eat me Nim 3eat
grape eat Nim 3eat me Nim drink 3grape eat me
Nim 3me eat drink more 3me eat me eat 3me
gum me gum 3me Nim eat me 3Nim me Nim
me 3tickle me Nim play 3
26Nims Longest Utterance
Give Orange Me Give Eat Orange Me Eat Orange
Give Me Eat Orange Give Me You.
27Language Acquisition
Children
MLU
Hearing
Deaf