Title: Language%20Acquisition
1Language Acquisition
Lecture 10
30 Nov.,
2005
2(No Transcript)
3- Required readings
- Tomasello, M. (2003). Constructing A Language. A
Uage-Based Thoery of Language Acquisition.
Harvard University Press. Chapter two Origins of
Language. pp. 8-42 - Lee, T. H. (2002). Two types of logical structure
in child language. Journal of Cognitive Science
3 155-182. - Pinker, S. (1994). The Language Instinct. New
York Morrow. Chapter 1 An instinct to acquire
an art. pp. 15-24. - Recommended readings
- Pinker, S. (1995). Language acquisition. In L. R.
Gleitman, M. Liberman, and D. N. Osherson (eds.),
An invitation to cognitive science. 2nd Ed.
Volume 1 Language. Cambridge, MA MIT Press.
Chapter 5 Why the child holded the baby rabbits
A case study in language acquisition. pp.
107-133. - Gould, J. L., Marler, P. (1987). Learning by
Instinct. Reprinted as Chapter 7 in Wang, W.
S.-Y. (ed.), (1991), The Emergence of Language
Development and Evolution Readings from
Scientific American Magazine, pp. 88-103. New
York, NY W.H. Freeman. - Moskowitz, B. A. (1978). The Acquisition of
Language. Reprinted as Chapter 10 in Wang, W.
S.-Y. (ed.), (1991), The Emergence of Language
Development and Evolution Readings from
Scientific American Magazine, pp. 131-149. New
York, NY W.H. Freeman.
4Language acquisition theories
- Two types of perspectives
- centered around nurture and nature
distinction or on empiricism and nativism. - Empiricism all knowledge comes from experience,
ultimately from our interaction with the
environment through our reasoning or senses. - Nativism at least some knowledge is not acquired
through interaction with the environment, but is
genetically transmitted and innate. - neither nurturists (environmentalists) disagree
thoroughly with the nativist ideas nor do
nativists with the nurturist ideas.
5Usage Based Accounts Theory of Language
Acquisition
- Supported by recent research
- characterize childrens language in terms of
cognitive and communicative processes involved - childrens early language based on specific
linguistic items and expressions they comprehend
and produce - Three processes involved
- Imitative learning
- Finding patterns in language
- Combining linguistic constructions creatively
6Tomasellos View (2003)
- The human uses of symbols is primary, with the
most likely evolutionary scenario being that the
human species evolved skills enabling the use of
linguistic symbols phylogenetically (p. 9) - The human adaptation for symbolic communication
emerges in human ontogeny quite predictably
across cultures at around 1 year of age. It
emerges in the context of a whole suite of new
social-cognitive skills, the most important for
language acquisition being the establishment of
joint attentional frames, the understanding
communicative intentions, and a particular type
of cultural learning known as role reversal
imitation. (p. 19)
7Early skills of Intention-reading
- (1) The joint attentional frame
- Joint attentional frames are defined
intentionally, that is, they gain their identity
and coherence from the childs and the adults
understandings of what we are doing in terms of
the goal-directed activities in which we are
engaged. (p. 22) - (2) Understanding communicative intentions
- Children understand adult communicative
intentions, including those expressed in
linguistic utterances, most readily inside the
common ground established by joint attentional
frames. (p. 24) - (3) Cultural learning in the form of role
reversal imitation - Children who understand that other persons have
intentional relations to the world, similar to
their own, may attend especially carefully to the
behavioral means that these persons have devised
for meeting their goals, and so may imitate their
intentional actions. (p. 26)
8The development of grammar
- Behavioural theory ? Language acquired through
learning (e.g., operant conditioning, imitation) - Parents and teachers model grammatically correct
language and provide feedback - Evidence?
9Theories 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
- Sentence corrected only if they are untrue
- Child (sees a car)Deres a truck
- Mother No, thats a car
- Ungrammatical requests as likely to be fulfilled
as ungrammatical requests
10Theories of grammar development
- 1. Behavioural theory
- Evidence more contrary than supportive.
- Imitation?
- Adults dont use telegraphic speech
- Adults dont over-regularize verbs
11Theories 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?
12Theories of grammar development
- 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
13Imitation - Research findings
- In early infancy there is some face-to-face
dyadic mimicking of behaviors (Meltzoff Moor,
1977) - Meltzoff (1995) found 18-month-olds appeared to
understand what the adult intended to do and
performed the action instead of just mimicking
the adults actual behavior. - Aktar Tomasello (1998a) investigated infants
imitation of accidental actions vs. intentional
actions. They found that 16-month-olds mainly
produced the adults intentional actions (there)
but not the accidental ones (Woops!)
14Meltzoff, A. N. Moore, M.K (1977). Imitation of
facial and manual gestures by human neonates.
Science, 198. 75-78
2- to 3-day-old infants imitating (a) tongue
protrusion, (b) mouth opening, and lip protrusion
demonstrated by adult experimenters. gestures by
human neonates.
15Early Skills of Pattern-Finding
- Human infants are experts from early in
development in finding visual patterns (Haith
Benson, 1997) - Synthesized speech exposed to 8-month-olds
(Saffran, Aslin, Newport, 1996). Infants
prefered to listen to the origial ones heard. - Marcus et al. (1999) found that 7-month-olds
preferred the speech stream containing the same
tri-syllabic nonsense words that have the same
pattern (e.g., bapopo) as they originally heard
(e.g., wididi, delili) - Gomez Gerken (1999) found very similar results
with 12-month-olds. - These results indicate that prelinguistic infants
are able to find patterns in auditory stimuli of
an abstract nature. (Tomasello, 2003 30)
16Universal pattern of language development
The same pattern is observed in every
culture This suggests that language is acquired
as a result of highly specialized biologically
programmed mechanisms operating on the linguistic
input.
17Language Development Stages and Rule Systems
- Browns (1973) Stages Mean Length of Utterance is
a good index of childs language maturity. Stages
indicate growth of language complexity. - Stage 1 - 12 to 26 months of age MLU 1.00 to
2.00 - Stage 2 - 27 to 30 months of age MLU 2.00 to
2.50 - Stage 3 - 31 to 34 months of age MLU 2.50 to
3.00 - Stage 4 - 35 to 40 months of age MLU 3.00 to
3.75 - Stage 5 - 41 to 46 months of age MLU 3.75 to
4.50
18Sensitive periods Isolated children
- Genie was an isolated child as an infant she was
locked away and not spoken to. She was discovered
by the authorities when aged 13. Though she
acquired words, she never acquired correct
grammar
19Isolated children (cont.)
- By contrast, Isabelle and her mute, brain-damaged
mother escaped from the imprisonment of her
grandfather when she was aged 6½. Within eighteen
months, her language was not significantly behind
the level expected at her age
20Language Exposure and Language Use
- Cameron-Faulkner, Lieven, and Tomasello (2003)
- examined 12 English-speaking mothers speech
during samples of their linguistic interactions
with their 2- to 3-year-old children
21The overall findings
- Children heard an estimated 5000 to 7000
utterances per day - Between one-quarter and one-third of these were
questions. - More than 20 of these were not full adult
sentences, but rather some kind of fragment (most
often a noun phrase or prepositional phrase) - About one-quarter of these were imperatives and
utterances structured by the copula - Only about 15 of these had the canonical English
SVO form (i.e., transitive utterances of various
kinds) supposedly characteristic of the English
language and over 80 of the SVOs had a pronoun
subject.
22- The specific words and phrases with which
mothers initiated utterances - Are you ..., I'll ..., It's ..., Can you ....,
Heres ...., Let's ..., Look at ..., What did
..., etc.
23- More than half of all maternal utterances began
with one of 52 highly frequent item-based frames - i.e., frames used more than an estimated 40 times
per day for more than half the children. - Mostly consisting of 2 words or morphemes.
24- More than 65 of all of the mothers utterances
began with one of just 156 item-based frames. - Approximately 45 of all maternal utterances
began with one of just 17 lexemes - What (8.6), That (5.3), It (4.2), You (3.1),
Are/Aren't (3.0), Do/Does/Did/Don't (2.9), I
(2.9), Is (2.3), Shall (2.1), A (1.7),
Can/Can't (1.7), Where (1.6), There (1.5), Who
(1.4), Come (1.0), Look (1.0), and Let's
(1.0). - Children used many of these same item-based
frames in their speech, in some cases at a rate
that correlated highly with their own mother's
frequency of use.
25Cameron-Faulkner, Lieven, Tomasello (2003)
Whats .18 Wheres .05 Whatre .09 Wherere .02
What do .05 Where shall .01 What did .04 What
has .03 Whos .08 What about .03 Who
did .01 What shall .02 What can .02 Which
one .02 What does .02 What hppnd .01 Why
dont .01 What were .01 What kind of .01 How
many .01
31 frames gt 80 of Wh Qs
13 frames gt 65 of Wh Qs
26Early Gestures
- Human infants produce three main types of
gestures - Reutilizations
- Deictic gestures
- Symbolic gestures
- Gestures run the gamut from non-symbolic to
symbolic and emerge along with the first
linguistic skills is strong evidence that
childrens ability to communicate symbolically is
not tied specially to language but rather
emanates from a more fundamental set of
social-cognitive skills (Tomasello Camaiono,
1997)
27Early Holophrases
- An important issue for later language development
is what parts of adult expressions children
choose for their initial holophrases. - The answer presumably lies in the specific
language they are learning and the kinds of
discourse in which they participate with adults,
including the perceptual salience of particular
words and phrases in adults speech (Slobin, 1985)
28Early Holophrases language specific
- In English, most beginning language learners
acquire a number of so-called relational words
such as more, gone, up, down, on and off,
presumably because adults use these words in
salient ways to talk about salient event s (Blom,
Tinker, and Margulis, 1993 McCune, 1992) - Many of these words are verb particles in adult
English and so the child at some point must learn
to talk about the same events with phrasal verbs
such as pick up, get down, put on, and take off. - In Korean and Mandarin Chinese, in contrast,
children learn fully adult verbs from the onset f
language development because these verbs are most
salient in adult speech to them (parallel to an
English verb like remove for clothing Choi
Gonpnik, 1996 Gopnik Choi, 1995 Tardif, 1996)
29Thomas Lees data (2002)
- Mandarin-speaking childrens Sensitivity to
quantifier type and thematic roles in their
understanding of inverse scope for sentences. - Suggestion
- Young children (about 4yeasrs of age) are
sensitive to constraints of the
conceptual-intentional system on quantifier scope
interpretation
30Phonological development
- Systematic age-related changes in the ability to
perceive and produce the elementary sounds of
language.
31Phonological development
- 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
32Phonological development
- 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)
33Phonological development
- 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
34Phonological development
- 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
35Learning words
- Evidence of word-comprehension _at_ 6 months
(Tincoff Juszyck, 1999) . - By 6, children understand over 5,000 different
words. - 20 new words a week for 5 years!!!
36Learning 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?
37Learning 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?
38Learning 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.
39Learning words
- Most frequently used words? Goplink (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".
40Early word comprehension
- 7-8 months olds. Typical early understood words
mummy, daddy, clock, drink, teddy (Harris, et
al., 1995) - Acquire 5 to 10 words a day from about 15th month
through the 6th year of life (Gleitman and
Cleitman, 1992) - Vocabulary spurt total number of words grow
fairly steadily until 12 months of age, when
there will typically be a sharp increase in
vocabulary
Average number of words understood by boys and
firls bet. 8 and 16 months of age (Fenson et al.
1994. p. 74)
41The development of grammar
- Telegraphic Speech
- Examples (Brown, 1973)
- (1) Agent-action "Tommy hit"
- (2) Action-object "Give cookie"
- (3) Possessor-possession "My car"
- (4) Questions Where daddy?
42The 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)
43The development of grammar
- 2. Inflectional morphology
- Rules governing the use of morphemes like
inflections (e.g., -s, -ed that alter the, -ing)
syntactical function of specific words - E.g.,
- Past tense Acquired in a regular sequence
- Not all past tenses formed through use of the
stem -ed rule (E.g., Run/Ran) - How do children learn the exceptions?
44The development of grammar
- 3. Irregular past-tense
- Rules governing the use of morphemes like
inflections (e.g., -s, -ed that alter the, -ing)
syntactical function of specific words
Developmental U-shaped curve
45The development of grammar
3. Irregular past-tense
- Developmental U-shaped curve
Developmental U-shaped curve
Proportion correct
Time
46The 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?
47The 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.
48Theories of Cognitive and Language Development
Piaget, Vygotsky and Bruner - Comparisons and
Contrasts
49Outline
- Brief review of Piagets theory
- The role of culture - implications for Piagets
theory - The theory of Vygotsky
- The theory of Bruner
50Summary of Piaget
- Stage theory of development - older children
think qualitatively differently to younger
children - 4 stages
- Stage 1 Sensorimoter Period (0-2 years)
- Stage 2 Pre-operational stage (2-7 years)
- Stage 3 Concrete Operational Stage (7-11 years)
- Stage 4 Formal Operational Stage (11 years)
- Development is the combined result of
- maturation of the brain and nervous system
- experiences that help children adapt to new
environments - adaption an organisms ability to
fit in with its environment.
51Alternative to Piaget 1 Lev Vygotsky
- 1896 - 1934
- Work remained little known because it was banned
by Stalin after Vygotskys death - Collapse of the Soviet Union meant
- greater dialogue between the West and Russia
- Vygotskys work translated into English
52Vygotskys Theory The role of culture/social
interaction
- Sociocultural environment ALL IMPORTANT for
cognitive development - Different contexts create different forms of
development - Cognitive processes (language, thought,
reasoning) develop THROUGH social interaction - Development is a product of CULTURE
- Vygotsky emphasised the role of
- social interaction
- instruction
53Central idea
- Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD)
- the difference between the level of actual
development and potential development
54Example from Seifert, Hoffnung Hoffnung
- Parent Here are four books for you and the same
for your brother - Child The same? (He investigates his brothers
pile of books.) No, he has more (spoken with
annoyance). - Parent No, really, theyre the same. Take
another look. - Child He does have more.
- ParentTry laying his out in a row. Then lay
yours out too. Then compare - Child(Does as suggested) One two three four .
One two three four. The same! (He looks
satisfied)
55Summary of the role of social interaction
- 1. Confirm existing knowledge
- 2. Add new information
- Instruction most effective when
- it builds on previous knowledge and skills (e.g.
counting) - it provides a sensible challenge - theres no
point pushing children beyond their potential
56Vygotskys theory The role of language
- Piagets view language is just another
representational system. Underdeveloped until 6
to 7 years of age - Vygotskys view language is social and
communicative. Essential for cognitive
development. - Why did Vygotsky think this?
- Private speech - children talk to themselves
57Vygotsky suggested
- adults give instructions to children (social
speech) - children start to use parents instructions to
direct their own behaviour (private speech) - private speech becomes internalised as thought
processes (silent statements) - Children use this internalised speech to plan
and organise behaviour gt cognitive development
58Summary of Vygotsky
- Culture and social interaction very important in
cognitive development - Social interaction with knowledgeable others
moves development forward - ZPD - Language is central to cognitive development
- social speech gt private speech gt thought
59Alternative to Piaget 2 Jerome Bruner
- Very influenced by Piagets and Vygotskys work
- Responsible for introducing Vygotskys work to
the non-Soviet world
60Bruners Theory Similarities with Piaget
- Socio-Cognitive Stage Theory
- Enactive Mode
- Iconic Mode
- Symbolic Mode
- Abstract thinking develops out of concrete
thinking
61Bruners Theory Similarities with Vygotsky
- Interpersonal communication necessary for
development - socio -cognitive theory - Development relies on active intervention of
expert others - SCAFFOLDING
- Contingency Rule (Wood, 1980)
62Bruners Theory The role of language
- Language is important
- without language, thought is limited
- language forms the basis of understanding
- prelinguistic thought - games and rituals
- rituals gradually replaced as adult adds
information - rituals replaced by linguistic modes of
communication
63Summary of Bruner
- Socio-cognitive stage theory
- Based on interaction with adults
- Relies on adults developing reciprocal behaviour
with the child
64Overall Conclusion
- Piaget underestimated the importance of culture
and social interaction - Vygotsky
- social interaction and language necessary for
cognitive development - Bruner
- Stage theory but emphasised role of social
interaction and language
65Akhtar (1999) Abbot-Smith et al. (2001)Weird
Word Order
- English-speaking children hear utterances with
weird word order (familiar and unfamiliar
verbs) - The cow the horse is meeking/pushing (SOV)
- They are encouraged to use these same verbs with
new characters engaging in these same actions
66AKHTAR (1999) ABBOT-SMITH et al. (2001)
Percentage of mean number of utterances which
were mismatches, as a function of condition and
age group
67Golinkoff et al. 1987
68Childers Tomasello (2001) Developmental
Psychology
- Children at 26 hear several hundred transitive
utterances over - 4 days/sessions
- Either familiar or unfamiliar English verbs
- With either nouns only in slots or nouns
pronouns (consistent)
- Test is traditional nonce verb learning
- child hears nonce verb as intransitive or
passive - and must produce in transitive
69Number of children in each condition (out of 10)
who produced at least one productive utterance
with at least one nonce verb during testing
20 same as in previous studies
70Development of Matrix Clauses
Diessel Tomasello, Cognitive Linguistics (2001)