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Cognition

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Title: Cognition


1
Cognition Language
2
LanguageThe Use of an Organized means of
combining words in order to communicate
  • Language makes it possible for our species to
    communicate
  • there is very good evidence to suggest that
    100,000 years ago the change in the physiology of
    primitive humans that allowed for human speech,
    also led to a change in our cognitive abilities.
  • Why? Because speech allows for communication
    about sophisticated abstract ideas and concepts.
    SYMBOLIC Representations, that bears only
    arbitrary relation to its referents

3
The Linguistic Relativity Hypothesis
  • The linguistic relativity hypothesis (also known
    as the Sapir/Whorfian hypothesis) proposes that
    words and the way we shape them, shapes our
    conception of the world.
  • That is, our linguistic processes shape our
    cognitive processes.
  • Certain Native American tribes Living in the
    Northwest, gather different types of mushrooms.
    They have a wide range of complex linguistic
    items (words) that they use to describe the
    different species, and so they have a richer
    grasp of the concept of mushroom.
  • Expert knowledge, the ability that some
    individuals have in a certain area is closely
    associated with this hypothesis. Experts have
    more words to describe a certain area than a
    non-expert (jargon).
  • Because of the specialized jargon, they are able
    to express more complex concepts that are
    domain-specific, than those without that
    experience.
  • So do words shape our cognitive processes?

4
The Study of Language
  • It is very important to note that not all human
    language consists of spoken items. Words can be
    written or signed (as in American Sign language).
  • Human Communication (that is the exchange of
    thoughts and feelings) can also consist of
    gestures, touch, shrugs, and other means of
    exchanging ideas.

5
Language is a Cognitive Process
  • There are several modern research areas that
    study language from a cognitive perspective,
    which are generically referred to as
    Psycholinguistics
  • Psycholinguistics-The study of Language as it
    interacts with the human mind.
  • Linguistics is the study of language structure
    and change
  • Neurolinguistics-is the study of relationships
    among brain,cognition, and language.
  • Sociolinguistics-the relationship between social
    behavior and language.

6
General Properties of Language
  • Different types of Linguistics are very different
    in the way they view language, and may disagree
    on the properties of language, but there are 6
    generally agreed on characteristics
  • Communication-Language permits us to communicate
    with one or more persons who share our language
  • Arbitrarily Symbolic-Language creates an
    arbitrary relationship between a symbol and it
    referent an idea, a process, a relationship, or
    a description.
  • Regularly structured-Language has a structure,
    only partially patterned arrangements of symbols
    have meanings, and different arrangements yield
    different meanings.
  • Structured at multiple levels-The structure of
    language can be analyzed at more than one level
    (e.g. in sounds, in meaning units, in words, in
    phrases)
  • Generative Productive-Within the limits of a
    linguistic structure, language users can produce
    novel utterances, and the potential for creating
    new utterances are virtually unlimited.
  • Dynamic-Languages constantly evolve

7
Fundamental Properties of Language from Any
Perspective
  • There are two fundamental aspects of language
  • Receptive comprehension decoding of Language
    input
  • Expressive encoding production of language
    output.
  • The First step in examining how speech is used by
    humans is to examine The Production Perception
    of Speech

8
The Perception of Sound
  • How we Hear

9
The Production Perception of Speech Structures
Involved in Sound Perception
10
Auditory Receptor Cells Transduction in the
Auditory System
11
The Primary Auditory Cortex
  • The primary auditory cortex receives input from
    the auditory nerve via the thalamus

12
The Auditory Cortex Wernickes Broccas Areas
  • These two brain areas have been associated with
    problems in the production and perception of
    speech
  • Broccas Aphasia is impairment in the production
    of speech
  • Wernickes Aphasia is impairment in the
    perception of speech

13
Recent research on Brain Damage Specific Word
Retrieval Impairment (Damasio et. al., 1996).
  • Problems with work retrieval for different types
    of concepts (e.g. tools vs. animals) has been
    localized to specific areas of the frontal
    temporal lobes

14
The Production of Language
  • How we produce the Basic Components

15
The Production Perception of Speech The
Production of Human Speech
  • Human speech is composed of a mixture of
    frequencys called formants
  • Each formant is composed of unique harmonic
    frequencys that are determined by several
    factors including the length and shape of the
    vocal tract. This causes each human being having
    a unique vocal signature.
  • We measure formants by using a Spectrogram

16
Additional Techniques for Looking at Speech
Production
  • Imaging techniques show the position of the
    production apparatus, and provide a visual
    example of the two cavity model of speech
    production.
  • A Palatagram can show the positioning of the
    tongue during speech.

17
The Structure of Language
Three Building Blocks of Spoken Language
18
What Are Phonemes?
  • PHONEME - shortest segment of speech, which, if
    changed, would change the meaning of a spoken
    word.

/bait/
/beet/
/bit/
Only 60 phonemes necessary to account for all
worlds languages! English requires 48
phonemes. Hawaiian requires only 11!
19
What Are Morphemes?
Morpheme - the shortest unit of spoken or
written language that carries meaning
Some morphemes are phonemes (e.g., I and a)
Most are combos of 2 or more phonemes
Some morphemes are words (e.g., bat)
20
What Is A Grammar?
Grammar - a system of rules (called semantics and
syntax) that enables us to communicate and
understand others
Semantics
Syntax
Rules we use to derive meaning from
morphemes, words sentences (-ed past tense)
Rules used to order words into sentences
21
Phonemes to Words
  • There are 48 Phonemes in the English Language,
    Different languages however have different
    numbers of phonemes necessary to produce the
    language.

22
Higher Levels of Linguistic Analysis
  • While Phonemes and Morphemes make up the basic
    units of language, Psychologists are often
    interested in a more global analysis of language.
  • Psychological investigations of language
    frequently look at words, phrases sentences, or
    prose rather than the more elementary speech
    units.
  • 3 Common levels of analysis that psychologists
    look at include
  • The lexical level-The types of words that appear
    and the way in which we interpret these
    linguistic units.
  • The Syntactic Level-How are the words arranged to
    form phrases and sentences. How can we identify
    the rules of language that generate an infinite
    number of grammatically correct sentences (e.g.
    phrase structure).
  • The semantic level-The analysis of the meaning of
    a sentence.

23
Examples of the The Critical Role of Semantics
  • The Critical Role of semantics has been
    investigated by many researchers.
  • These studies have generally shown that when
    subjects listen to passages of connected
    discourse, there recognition memory for sentences
    after a short delay is far more sensitive to
    changes in semantics (e.g. subject-object
    reversal) than changes in syntactic (e.g. changes
    in active to passive voice).

24
Describing Sentences Phrase Structure
  • Linguists have found it useful to describe a
    sentence into phrases which are groupings of
    words.
  • Analysis of a sentence into its various phrases
    is accomplished by describing the phrase
    structure.
  • A sentence is divided into two basic phrases, a
    noun phrase, and a verb phrase. These are then
    further divided into sub components.
  • The noun phrase is divided into determiner and a
    noun
  • The verb phrase is divided into the verb and the
    noun phrase

25
Surface Structure and Deep Structure
  • Surface structure is the organization that
    describes the sequence of phrases in a sentence
    as it is actually spoken and reflects the
    phonological realization of the complex,
    underlying linguistic structure.
  • Deep Structure, refers to the underlying meaning
    of the sentence

26
The Structure of Language A Comprehensive Process
  • The comprehension of language is a series of
    steps that builds on comprehensive relationships.
  • Phonemes based on formant frequencies are built
    into morphemes, which are in turn built into
    words, which are built into phrases and
    sentences.
  • Raw speech sounds begin the comprehension
    process, comprehension begins where speech
    production ends. Interpretation of context and
    structural semantics then further influence
    speech perception.

27
Developmental Components of Language
  • A Natural Predisposition to Acquire Language

28
Theories of Language Development
Nature vs Nurture
B.F. Skinner
Language develops due to association, imitation
and reinforcement (Operant Conditioning)
Rate of learning cannot be explained solely by
learning principles Brains are prewired with
a Universal Grammar suitable for all languages
and dialects
Noam Chomsky
29
Nativist Views of Language A Critical Window for
Language Acquisition
  • The best evidence to support Chomskys nativist
    explanation of language, is that humans and
    humans alone, have a brain that specifically
    supports the learning of a first language
    (Rasmunssen Milner, 1977).
  • In addition several studies have indicated that
    there is a critical window for acquiring both
    spoken language, and sign language (Johnson
    Newport, 1989 Hurford, 1991).
  • Also older children, and young adults who attempt
    to learn a second language find that learning a
    second language is extremely difficult compared
    to the first.
  • Studies of second language learning also show
    that the second language seems to be in a
    different type of memory code (Jiang Foster,
    2001) and that it is encoded in a different part
    of the brain (Kim, Redlin, Lee, Hirsch, 1997).
  • Critical Brain injury or impoverished
    environments also support the idea of a critical
    window for language.

30
The Normal Developmental Sequence of Language
also demonstrates evidence for a nativist view
  • Children learn language at an amazing pace, again
    does this imply a natural language acquisition
    process

31
Age of Language Acquisition 1
Infant
No Language
4 Months
Can read lips Discriminate non-native speech
sounds Babbling Stage - includes sounds from many
different languages
Native language babbling Lose ability to
discriminate non-native speech sounds
10 Months
32
Age of Language Acquisition 2
One-Word Stage - sounds used to communicate
meaning (e.g., Ma Da)
1 Year
Approx 2 Years
Two-Word Stage - characterized by Telegraphic
Speech (e.g., Puppy do trick) Sentences follow
rules of syntax
33
Individual Variability in Language Acquisition
  • Vocabulary acquisition is highly variable, 3
    different children will increase their
    vocabularies at different rates all within normal
    ranges

34
Language Acquisition Does Seem to Have a
Critical Window
  • Vocabulary seems to develop at an early age.
  • Brain imaging studies show that fluent speakers
    or early learners store information in adjacent
    areas of the brain.
  • Those that learn a language later in life seem to
    store linguistic information in non-adjacent
    areas or at least areas that are further apart
    than early learners or fluent learners

35
Language and Human Evolution
Spoken, Gestured or Written words and the way we
combine them as we think and communicate
Does language truly set us apart from all other
species?
36
Are We Alone?
Can apes be taught language?
Washoe learned 132 signs by age 4 and 240 signs
by age 27
Evidence of creative sentence construction
Vocabularies and sentences are simple (2 yr old
child)
But are apes really using language?
37
SoCan Apes Possess Language?
It depends...
Verbal or signed expression of complex grammar?
No.
Communication through a meaningful sequence of
symbols?
Yes.
38
Language Development
How Many Words Do You Know?
Average High School Grad Knows 80,000 words
Schools teach approx 200 words per year BUT You
learned approx 5,000 words per year!
How Did You Learn All Those Other Words?!?
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