Language 4.6 [HY] Flashcards
Categorical Perception
when a language has subtle differences in speech sounds that represent a change in meaning, children learn to distinguish those phonemes
Morphology
- structure of words
- composed of multiple building blocks called morphemes
Semantics
- the association of meaning with a word
- certain combinations of phonemes represent certain physical objects or events, and that words may refer to entire categories
Syntax
how words are put together to form sentences
Pragmatics
- Dependence of language on context and preexisting knowledge
- Affected by prosody: the rhythm, cadence, and inflection of our voices
Timeline of Language Acquisition
- 9 to 12 months: babbling
- 12 to 18 months: about one word per month
- 18 to 20 months: “explosion of language” and combining words
- 2 to 3 years: longer sentences (3 words or more)
- 5 years: language rules largely mastered
Naming explosion (18-20 months)
- the child quickly learns dozens of words, and uses each word
with varying inflection and gestures to convey a desired meaning - Overextension occurs: inappropriately apply a term to an object that bears cursory similarities to the term.
Errors of Growth (2-3 years)
- a child applies a grammatical rule (often a morpheme) in a situation where it does not apply
Nativist (biological) theory
advocates for the existence of some innate capacity for language
Transformational grammar
focused on syntactic transformations, or changes in word order that retain the same meaning
Language acquisition device (LAD)
theoretical pathway in the brain that allows infants to process and absorb language rules.
Critical Period for Language
two years and puberty
Sensitive period
- a time when environmental input has maximal effect on the development of an ability
- For language its before puberty
Learning (behaviorist) theory
- language acquisition by operant conditioning (reinforcement)
- caregivers repeat and reinforce sounds that sound
most like the language they speak
Social interactionist theory
- language development focuses on the interplay between biological and social processes
- language acquisition is driven by the child’s desire to communicate and behave in a social manner, such as interacting with caretakers and other children
- Brain develops and groups sounds and meanings together
- as the child interacts with others, certain brain
circuits are reinforced, while others are de-emphasized, resulting in atrophy
of those circuits.