Language Flashcards

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1
Q

language

A

a system that relates sounds or gestures to meaning

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2
Q

Characteristics of human language (4)

A
  1. Symbolism
  2. Grammatically structures and meaningful
  3. Displacement (we can talk about events in the past and future
  4. Generativity (can create sentences we’ve never heard but still make grammatical sense)
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3
Q

Phonemes

A

the smallest unit of sound
e.g.: /p/ vs /b/ — pit vs bit
*can change the meaning of a word

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4
Q

Morphemes

A

the smallest unit of meaning
e.g. suffix ‘s’ means more than 1

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5
Q

Syntax

A

the rules for word combinations

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6
Q

Theory of Language Development: Nurture

A

argues that we learn language from our environment
*supported by Behaviorists

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7
Q

Theory of Language Development: Nature

A

children are born with innate mental structures that guid their acquisition of language
-supported by Noam Chomsky

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8
Q

Support for nature/nativist perspective

A

-children apply rules of grammar to novel words (wug vs wugs)
-critical age periods to learn a language
-animals don’t learn language as readily or successfully as humans

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9
Q

Map the path of language learning in infants

A
  1. Birth - crying
  2. 1 month - cooing (oohs and ahhs)
  3. 4-6 months - babbling (consonant vowels combos, which change based on the language, e.g. “bah bah”, “dah dah”)
  4. end of 1st year - patterned speech (pseudo words and patterns of the language, strings of phonemes from their native language)
  5. 10 -15 months - first words
  6. 18 months - learning of new words takes off
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10
Q

How does the ability to distinguish phonemes change as we age?

A

We’re better at distinguishing sounds as an infant

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11
Q

Explain how the conditioned heard turn procedure works

A
  1. First, you train the child to turn their head when they detect a change in the sound (operant conditioning)
    -child hears “bah” repeatedly. They then hear “dah” when a different toy lights up. Once this association is learned, you slow down turning on the toy.
  2. Because infants around 6-8 months can better distinguish between different sounds, they will turn their head when they hear something new in anticipation of the toy turning on.

*recall example of Salish language

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12
Q

Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis

A

argues that language shapes the way we think, and determines what we can think about

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13
Q

Sapir-Whorf strong version

A

thoughts and behaviors are determined by language

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14
Q

Sapir-Whorf weak version

A

thoughts and behaviors are influenced by language

*this is more likely

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15
Q

Evidence for Sapir-Whorf weak version

A
  1. “Key” is feminine in Spanish and masculine in German. Germans tended to describe keys in more masculine adjectives compared to Spanish speakers.
  2. Russian Blues Example: two different words for blue can influence reaction times
    -presented people with a swatch of a shade of blue, and participants were to match it to the corresponding shade
    -russian speakers were faster when across categories (one siniy, one goluboy) then within categories) vs no difference between English speakers
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