Title: Survey of Modern Psychology
1Survey of Modern Psychology
2Five Properties of Language
- Creative or novel
- We do not memorize sentences, we create them as
we go along - Highly structured or patterned
- Meaningful
- Meaning is derived from the words used and their
order - Referential
- Refers to and describes things in the real world
- Interpersonal/communicative
- Involves the thoughts of more than one person at
a time
3How Children Learn Language
- It had been theorized that children learn by
imitation and correction with reinforcement - However
- Children produce new sentences that they have not
heard before, often incorrectly - Parents do not always correct grammatical/linguist
ic mistakes - A child who creates grammatically incorrect new
sentences may still be told very good if he or
she has just started talking or is using new words
4How Children Learn Language
- Motherese
- Adults tend to use motherese when speaking to
babies - Higher pitched, slower rate, exaggerated
intonations - Pauses between sentences and words are better
defined - Babies prefer motherese to adult conversational
tones
5How Children Learn Language Errors
- Children may over or under generalize the meaning
of a word - Undergeneralization Not realizing that house
refers to large houses as well as doll houses - Overgeneralization Thinking that all men are
called Daddy
6How Children Learn Language
- At 16 months old, children generally use one word
utterances, but we interpret them as having a
full sentences worth of intended meaning - For example, we would assume that a child is
asking for a cookie, not merely announcing the
presence of a cookie.
7How Children Learn Language
- In studies, if a 16 month old hears, Oh look!
Big Bird is tickling Cookie Monster they look to
the appropriate picture indicating that they do
understand prepositions
8How Children Learn Language Sensitivity to
Patterns
- Children learn that syntax provides clues as to
what type of word is being used - In a study using 3 4 year olds
- If asked, In this picture, can you see sebbing?
children made the same movement with their hands - If asked, In this picture, can you see a seb?
children pointed to the container - If asked, In this picture, can you see any seb?
children pointed to the contents of the container
9How Children Learn LanguageSensitivity to
Patterns
- 8 month old babies heard a two minute tape
recording that sounded like bidakupadotigolabubid
aku - There were no differences in how syllables were
stressed, and no pauses - The experimenters had decided that bidaku would
be a word - bida would always be followed by ku
- daku could be followed by anything
10How Children Learn LanguageSensitivity to
Patterns
- In subsequent recordings, the babies showed no
evidence of surprise if they heard
bidakubidakubidaku - They did show surprise if they heard
dakupadakupadakupa - They had heard the same syllables before, but
that combination was new and therefore a new word
11How Children Learn LanguageSensitivity to
Patterns
- The sensitivity to patterns may cause
difficulties in a language like English - The suffix ed usually means past tense
- Generalizing the pattern would yield I goed I
eated and I drinked - Usually s means plural, yielding foots and
mouses - This is called overregularization
12How Children Learn Language
- Every language has a limited number of phonemes
(the smallest significant unit of sound in a
language) - The phonemes vary across languages
13How Children Learn Language
- Ex. in English, the difference in pronunciation
between L and R is important - Lob and Rob sound similar, but have different
meanings - In Japanese, there is no linguistic difference
between L and R, and therefore Japanese people
often have trouble hearing a difference between
the sounds or producing it
14How Children Learn Language
- At birth, we have the ability to perceive all of
the phonemes across different languages but we
lose that ability if it is not used - By 6 months the ability has started to diminish
- By 12 months its mostly gone
-
15Selective Looking ExperimentsMarcuss Research
- A baby sits on his or her caregivers lap in
front of two video screens, one on the left, one
on the right - The caregiver is blindfolded so he or she cannot
direct the babys attention to either screen - Sound plays from a speaker, and a moving image
appears on the left or right screen
16Selective Looking ExperimentsMarcuss Research
- In the first part of the experiment, the baby is
introduced to a series of nonsense syllables
following an ABB pattern - i.e., la ti ti do fe fe
- As the sound plays from the left or right
speaker, an image appears on the corresponding
screen - At first, the baby finds this interesting and
turns to look at the appropriate screen - When the baby gets used to the setup (habituated)
he or she looks at the screens less often and for
shorter periods of time
17Selective Looking ExperimentsMarcuss Research
- In the second part of the experiment, phonemes
from another language are used - The phonemes follow the same ABB pattern or an
ABA pattern - i.e., la ti la do fe do
- When the phonemes follow the familiar pattern, it
is uninteresting and the baby does not attend to
the monitor - When the phonemes follow the ABA pattern, it is
novel and the baby does attend to the monitor
18Selective Looking ExperimentsMarcuss Research
- The difference in the babys interest in the ABB
vs. ABA patterns with foreign language phonemes
show that the baby can hear the sounds as being
different from each other