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Language and Communication

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Title: Language and Communication


1
  • Language and Communication

2
What is Language?
  • Communication, speech, and language are NOT the
    same things.
  • Human language is a symbolic communication
    system.
  • Human language is learned rather than being
    biologically inherited.

http//www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/library/07/2/l_0
72_04.html
3
Language Defined
  • Language symbols that convey meaning, plus rules
    for combining those symbols that can be combined
    to generate infinite variety of messages.
  • 3 - Properties of Language
  • Symbolic represents objects, actions, events
    ideas (ex car class of objects that have
    certain properties).
  • Generative limited number of symbols can
    generate infinite array of novel messages (there
    is always something novel).
  • Structured infinite variety is structured in a
    limited number of ways (Rules govern the
    arrangement of words into phrases sentences).

4
Hierarchical Structure of Language
  • Phonemes smallest (basic) speech units that can
    be distinguished perceptually (ex Ch, Th, a ).
  • 100 possible, English has about 40 phonemes.
  • Morphemes smallest unit of meaning.
  • 50,000 in English Example unfriendly root
    words (friend), prefixes (un), suffixes (ly)
    unfriendly 3 morphemes.
  • Semantics meaning of words and word
    combinations.
  • Denotation dictionary definitions
  • Connotation emotional overtones secondary
    implications.
  • Example clever, cunning, slick, sly all same
    denotation.
  • Syntax a system of rules for arranging words
    into sentences.
  • Different rules for different languages
    sentence must have a noun phrase verb phrase.

5
The Nature of Language
  • There are approximately 6,000 languages around
    the world (although 60 of the people speak only
    30 different languages half of the number
    existing today will vanish within the century).
  • All languages are organized in the same basic
    way.
  • Spoken languages use sounds and rules for putting
    the sounds together.
  • Sign languages use gestures rather than sounds.

According to Genesis, the observed variety of
human languages originated at the Tower of Babel
with the confusion of tongues. (Image from
Gustave Doré's Illustrated Bible).
6
Historical Linguistics
  • Historical linguistics deals with the fact that
    languages change over time.
  • Language family
  • A group of languages descended from a single
    ancestral language.
  • Linguistic divergence
  • The development of different languages from a
    single ancestral language.

7
Glottochronology
  • In linguistics, glottochronology is a method for
    identifying the approximate time that languages
    branched off from a common ancestor.
  • It is based on analyzing core vocabularies.
  • Core vocabularies (Cognates)
  • In language, pronouns, lower numerals, and names
    for body parts and natural objects (etc.).

8
Historical Linguistics Cognates
  • Cognates are vocabulary words from two or more
    languages which sound similar and refer to the
    same thing.
  • English Spanish
  • One Uno
  • Sun Sol
  • Day Dia
  • Latin is the historical root language for the
    so-called Romance Languages (Spanish, French,
    Italian, etc). Thus, the Romance Languages share
    a great number of cognates because they share a
    common origin.

9
English Indo-European Languages
10
Language Mapping
11
Origin of Language One Theory
  • Early hominids probably began using gestures to
    communicate intentions within a social setting.
  • FOXP2 gene Language or Speech gene responsible
    for major inherited speech disorder (KE family
    studied).
  • Over 3 generation, half the family afflicted.
  • Inability to form intelligible speech.
  • Defects in processing words according to rules.
  • Caused by a single nucleotide mutation on exon 14
    of chromosome 7.
  • Very conserved gene 1 change in 75 million
    years before the divergence of chimps humans
    and 2 in the 6 million years since that
    divergences.
  • Mutation occurred 10,000 100,000 years ago and
    may be critical for the development of modern
    human speech.

12
Biology and Human Speech
Sound systems. The human upper respiratory tract
made speech possible as the high larynx seen in
species like the chimp (left) dropped, creating
an expanded pharynx (red). AFTER J. LAITMAN, LA
RECHERCHE
13
Gestures Body Lanuage
  • The Hook em, hornssalute flashed by U.S.
    President Bush and his family during his 2005
    inauguration shocked many Europeans who
    interpreted it as a salute to Satan.
  • Proxemics The cross-cultural study of
    humankinds perception and use of space.
  • Intimate 0 -18 inches
  • Personal 11/2 4 feet
  • Social 4 12 feet
  • Public 12 beyond

14
Origins of the Gesture-Call System
Vervet Monkey Alarm Calls
  • Inherited from our primate ancestors.
  • Gesture component consists of body motions used
    to convey messages.
  • Call component consists of extralinguistic noises
    involving various voice qualities and
    vocalizations.

3 different alarm calls for 3 different
predators leopards, eagles, pythons.
Each type elicits a different response in other
monkeys. Leopardsrun into trees. Eaglesrun
into the bushes. Pythonbipdeal to spot snake
move away.
15
Paralanguage
  • The extralinguistic noises that accompany
    language, for example, those of crying or
    laughing. Its not whats said, but how its
    said
  • Giggling, groaning, or sighing
  • Pitch tempo of speech

Tonal language
  • A language in which the sound pitch of a spoken
    word is an essential part of its pronunciation
    and meaning.
  • 70 of the worlds languages are tonal.
  • Example Mandarin Chinese has 4 contrasting
    tones flat, rising, falling, falling then
    rising.

16
Can Animals Develop Languages?
  • Allen and Beatrice Gardner (1969) (
    http//www.friendsofwashoe.org/ )
  • Chimpanzee Washoe learned ASL 160 word
    vocabulary.
  • Rules of language or Operant conditioning (Nim
    Chimpsky)?
  • Penny Patterson Koko (1971) (
    http//www.koko.org/index.php )
  • Koko the gorilla understands 1,000 ASL signs
    approx 2,000 spoken English words.
  • Irene Peperberg Alex the African Grey parrot
    (1975-2007).
  • ( http//www.alexfoundation.org/ )
  • Could identify fity different objects and
    recognize quantities up to six could distinguish
    seven colors and five shapes had a vocabulary of
    about 150 words (operant conditioning?).
  • Sue Savage-Rumbaugh
  • (http//www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?sto
    ryId5503685 )
  • Bonobo chimpanzee Kanzi (the Einstein of
    chimps?)
  • Used symbols that represented language.
  • Receptive language 72 of 660 requests.

17
Linguistic Relativity
  • Linguistic relativity The idea that distinctions
    encoded in one language are unique to that
    language (example Inuits have many words for
    snow.
  • Linguistic Determinism The structure of language
    influences how individuals perceives
    conceptualizes the world. (Language completely
    determines how we think).
  • Sometimes called the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis after
    its originators Edward Sapir and his student
    Benjamin Lee Whorf.

18
The Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis
  • A language is not simply an encoding process but
    is rather a shaping force.
  • Language guides thinking and behavior by
    predisposing people to see the world in a certain
    way.
  • They suggest that speakers of different languages
    think about the world in quite different ways.
  • There has been a recent renewal of interest in
    this hypothesis.

19
Linguistic Determinism the Aymara Indians
  • Aymara Indians living in the highlands of Bolivia
    and Peru in South America depend on the potato as
    their major source of food.
  • Their language has over 200 words for this
    vegetable, reflecting the many varieties they
    grow and the different ways they preserve and
    prepare it.

20
Cross-cultural comparisons
  • If a language doesnt distinguish between blue
    and green, do people who speak that language
    think about colors differently than people in
    other cultures do?
  • Speakers of African languages that do not
    distinguish between blue and green have a harder
    time making quick discriminations between blue
    and green than English-speaking subjects (Ozgen,
    2004).
  • Additional studies have found that language can
    have some impact on how people think about motion
    (Gennari et al., 2002), time (Boroditsky, 2001),
    and shapes (Davidoff Shapiro, 2002).
  • Is the new data sufficient to support the
    original strong version of the hypothesis or a
    weaker version that suggest that language can
    make certain ways of thinking easier or harder?

21
Writing Systems
  • Tallies by carving notches in wood, bone, and
    stone were used for at least forty thousand
    years. Stone age cultures, including ancient
    American Indian groups, used tallies for gambling
    with horses, slaves, personal services and
    trade-goods but this was not writing.
  • A set of visible or tactile signs used to
    represent units of language in a systematic way.
  • An alphabet is a series of symbols representing
    the sounds of a language arranged in a
    traditional order.
  • The history of the alphabet starts in ancient
    Egypt. By 2700 BC Egyptian writing had a set of
    some 22 hieroglyphs to represent syllables that
    begin with a single consonant of their language,
    plus a vowel (or no vowel) to be supplied by the
    native speaker.

Tally marks on stone from Blombos cave, South
Africa 77,000 years old.
14th century BC letter in Akkadian.
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