Title: Psycholinguistics I
1Psycholinguistics I
2What is psycholinguistics about?
3Guiding Questions
- What do speakers of a language mentally
represent? - How did those representations get there?
- How are those representations constructed?
- How are those representations encoded?
4Language is a Human Specialization
- Species specificity
- Within-species invariance
- Spontanous development, insensitivity to input
- Independence of general intelligence
- Selective brain damage
- The Language Instinct Pinker 1994 see
Gleitman Newport chapter readings for nice
summary - These arguments suggest that theres a coherent
object of study, but tell us very little about
its form
5We need explicit answers
- What do speakers of a language mentally
represent? - How did those representations get there?
- How are those representations constructed?
- How are those representations encoded?
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8Explicit models quickly reveal surprising
complexity
9A Simple(-ish) Example
- Distribution of pronouns/reflexives
- John likes him/himself.
- John thinks that Mary likes him/himself.
- Infinitival clauses
- John appeared to Bill to like himself.
- John appeared to Bill to like him.
- But
- John appealed to Bill to like himself.
- John appealed to Bill to like him.
- Abstract solution
- Johni appealed to Billj PROj to like himselfj
10Abstraction is a double-edged sword
11Abstraction
- Abstraction is valuable
- Provides representational power
- Provides representational freedom
- Abstraction is costly
- Linguistic representations are more distant from
experience - This places a burden on the learner - motivation
for innate knowledge - This places a burden on comprehension/production
systems - (and it makes it harder to know what to look for
in the brain)
12Sensory Maps Internal representations of the
outside world. Cellular neuroscience has
discovered a great deal in this area.
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14Lab 1
15Acoustic Continua andPhonetic Categories
16Frequency - Tones
17Frequency - Tones
18Frequency - Tones
19Frequency - Tones
20Frequency - Complex Sounds
21Frequency - Complex Sounds
22Frequency - Vowels
- Vowels combine acoustic energy at a number of
different frequencies - Different vowels (a, i, u etc.) contain
acoustic energy at different frequencies - Listeners must perform a frequency analysis of
vowels in order to identify them(Fourier
Analysis)
23Frequency - Male Vowels
24Frequency - Male Vowels
25Frequency - Female Vowels
26Frequency - Female Vowels
27Synthesized Speech
- Allows for precise control of sounds
- Valuable tool for investigating perception
28Timing - Voicing
29Voice Onset Time (VOT)
60 msec
30English VOT production
31Perceiving VOT
Categorical Perception
32Discrimination
A More Systematic Test
Same/Different
D
D
0ms 60ms
0ms
20ms
D
T
20ms
40ms
Same/Different
0ms 10ms
T
T
40ms
60ms
Same/Different
Within-Category Discrimination is Hard
40ms 40ms
33Quantifying Sensitivity
34Quantifying Sensitivity
- Response bias
- Two measures of discrimination
- Accuracy how often is the judge correct?
- Sensitivity how well does the judge distinguish
the categories? - Quantifying sensitivity
- Hits MissesFalse Alarms Correct Rejections
- Compare p(H) against p(FA)
35Quantifying Sensitivity
- Is one of these more impressive?
- p(H) 0.75, p(FA) 0.25
- p(H) 0.95, p(FA) 0.45
- A measure that amplifies small percentage
differences at extremesz-scores
36Normal Distribution
Standard Deviation A measure of dispersionaround
the mean.
37The Empirical Rule
1 s.d. from mean 68 of data
2 s.d. from mean 95 of data
3 s.d. from mean 99.7 of data
38Quantifying Sensitivity
- A z-score is a reexpression of a data point in
units of standard deviations.(Sometimes also
known as standard score) - In z-score data, µ 0, ? 1
- Sensitivity score d z(H) - z(FA)
39See Excel worksheetsensitivity.xls
40Quantifying Differences
41(Näätänen et al. 1997)
(Aoshima et al. 2004)
(Maye et al. 2002)
42Normal Distribution
Standard Deviation A measure of dispersionaround
the mean.
43The Empirical Rule
1 s.d. from mean 68 of data
2 s.d. from mean 95 of data
3 s.d. from mean 99.7 of data
44Normal Distribution
Standard deviation ? 2.5 inches
Heights of American Females, aged 18-24
Mean (µ) 65.5 inches
45- If we observe 1 individual, how likely is it that
his score is at least 2 s.d. from the mean? - Put differently, if we observe somebody whose
score is 2 s.d. or more from the population mean,
how likely is it that the person is drawn from
that population?
46- If we observe 2 people, how likely is it that
they both fall 2 s.d. or more from the mean? - and if we observe 10 people, how likely is it
that their mean score is 2 s.d. from the group
mean? - If we do find such a group, theyre probably from
a different population
47- Standard Erroris the Standard Deviation of
sample means.
48- If we observe a group whose mean differs from the
population mean by 2 s.e., how likely is it that
this group was drawn from the same population?
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50Development of Speech Perception in Infancy
51Voice Onset Time (VOT)
60 msec
52Perceiving VOT
Categorical Perception
53Discrimination
A More Systematic Test
Same/Different
D
D
0ms 60ms
0ms
20ms
D
T
20ms
40ms
Same/Different
0ms 10ms
T
T
40ms
60ms
Same/Different
Within-Category Discrimination is Hard
40ms 40ms
54Cross-language Differences
L
R
L
R
55Cross-Language Differences
English vs. Japanese R-L
56Three Classics
57Development of Speech Perception
- Unusually well described in past 30 years
- Learning theories exist, and can be tested
- Jakobsons suggestion children add feature
contrasts to their phonological inventory during
development
Roman Jakobson, 1896-1982Kindersprache, Aphasie
und allgemeine Lautgesetze, 1941
58Developmental Differentiation
UniversalPhonetics
Native Lg.Phonology
Native Lg.Phonetics
0 months
6 months
12 months
18 months
591 - Infant Categorical Perception
- Eimas, Siqueland, Jusczyk Vigorito, 1971
60Discrimination
A More Systematic Test
Same/Different
D
D
0ms 60ms
0ms
20ms
D
T
20ms
40ms
Same/Different
0ms 10ms
T
T
40ms
60ms
Same/Different
Within-Category Discrimination is Hard
40ms 40ms
61English VOT Perception
To Test 2-month olds Not so easy! High Amplitude
Sucking Eimas et al. 1971
62General Infant Abilities
- Infants show Categorical Perception of speech
sounds - at 2 months and earlier - Discriminate a wide range of speech contrasts
(voicing, place, manner, etc.) - Discriminate Non-Native speech contrastse.g.,
Japanese babies discriminate r-le.g., Canadian
babies discriminate d-D
63Universal Listeners
- Infants may be able to discriminate all speech
contrasts from the languages of the world!
64How can they do this?
- Innate speech-processing capacity?
- General properties of auditory system?
65What About Non-Humans?
- Chinchillas show categorical perception of
voicing contrasts!
662 - Becoming a Native Listener
67When does Change Occur?
Janet Werker U. of British Columbia
Conditioned Headturn Procedure
68When does Change Occur?
- Hindi and Salishcontrasts testedon English kids
Janet Werker U. of British Columbia
Conditioned Headturn Procedure
69What do Werkers results show?
- Is this the beginning of efficient memory
representations (phonological categories)? - Are the infants learning words?
- Or something else?
70Korean has l r
- rupi ruby
- kiri road
- saram person
- irmi name
- ratio radio
- mul water
- pal big
- s\ul Seoul
- ilkop seven
- ipalsa barber
713 - What, no minimal pairs?
72A Learning Theory
- How do we find out the contrastive phonemes of a
language? - Minimal Pairs
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74Word Learning
- Stager Werker 1997bih vs. dihandlif
vs. neem
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76PRETEST
77HABITUATION
TEST
SAME
SWITCH
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79Abstraction
- Representations
- Sound encodings - clearly non-symbolic, but
otherwise unclear - Phonetic categories
- Memorized symbols /k/ /æ/ /t/
- Behaviors
- Successful discrimination
- Unsuccessful discrimination
- Step-like identification functions
- Grouping different sounds
80Word learning results
81Why Yearlings Fail on Minimal Pairs
- They fail specifically when the task requires
word-learning - They do know the sounds
- But they fail to use the detail needed for
minimal pairs to store words in memory - !!??
82One-Year Olds Again
- One-year olds know the surface sound patterns of
the language - One-year olds do not yet know which sounds are
used contrastively in the language - and which sounds simply reflect allophonic
variation - One-year olds need to learn contrasts
83Maybe not so bad after all...
- Children learn the feature contrasts of their
language - Children may learn gradually, adding features
over the course of development - Phonetic knowledge does not entailphonological
knowledge
Roman Jakobson, 1896-1982
84Werker et al. 2002
14
17
20
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86Swingley Aslin, 2002
- 14-month olds did recognize mispronunciations of
familiar words
87Alternatives to Reviving Jakobson
- Word-learning is very hard for younger children,
so detail is initially missed when they first
learn words - Many exposures are needed to learn detailed word
forms at early stages of word-learning - Success on the Werker/Stager task seems to be
related to the vocabulary spurt, rapid growth in
vocabulary after 50 words
88Questions about Development
896-12 Months What Changes?
90Structure Changing
Patricia KuhlU. of Washington
91Structure Adding
- Evidence for Structure Adding(i) Some
discrimination retained when sounds presented
close together (e.g. Hindi d-D contrast)(ii)
Discrimination abilities better when people hear
sounds as non-speech(iii) Adults do better than
1-year olds on some sound contrasts - Evidence for Structure Changing(i) No evidence
of preserved non-native category boundaries in
vowel perception
92Sources of Evidence
- Structure-changing mostly from vowels
- Structure-adding mostly from consonants
- Conjecture structure-adding is correct in
domains where there are natural articulatory (or
acoustic) boundaries
93So how do infants learn?
- Surface phonetic patterns
- Tests of experimentally induced changes
945 hours exposure to Mandarin human interaction
2003, Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences
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97Jessica Maye, Northwestern U.
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101- Infants at age 6-8 months are still universal
listeners, cf. Pegg Werker (1997) - Infants trained on bi-modal distribution show
novelty preference for test sequence with fully
alternating sequence - How could the proposal scale up?
102Invariance
(Jusczyk 1997)
103Training on g-k or d-t, generalization across
place of articulation.(Dis-)habituation paradigm.
Maye Weiss, 2003
104So how do infants learn?
- Phoneme categories and alternations
- Perhaps more like a phonologist than like a
LING101 student - look directly for systematic
relations among phones - Gradual articulation of contrastive information
encoded in lexical entries - Much remains to be understood
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106Abstraction in Infant Speech Encoding
- From a very early age infants show great
sensitivity to speech sounds, possibly already
with some category-like structure - Although native-like sensitivity develops early
(lt 1 year), this should be distinguished from
adult-like knowledge of the sound system of the
language - Children still need to learn how to efficiently
encode words (phoneme inventory) - Children presumably still need to learn how to
map stored word forms onto pronunciations
(phonological system of the language) - Popular distributional approaches to learning the
sound system address rather non-abstract
encodings of sounds, at best