language part 2 Flashcards
children have…
highly developed pattern recognition systems which allows children to form language categories through picking up on regularities without resorting to innate language categories.
The idea is that children are able to pull out syntactic categories… depending on if the language environment is rich enough
Tony Mince
Children can extract information without having any preexisting language knowledge
Social Learning (environment)
Parentese: simplified speech/ innotation
social responding to infants language attempts
child vocab is associated with amount of language parents use with them
Feedback to children varies between cultures…
Independent Cultures: self concept is separate from group/ personal goals take priority over group goals
Interdependent Cultures: relationships are crucial/ group goals are priority
how do you re-present the world to oneself?
- Analogical Representation (mental image)
- Symbolic representation (propositional thoughts)
Analogical mental Representations
‘R’ rotated - more it was rotated the longer it took to say if it was a mirror image or not
Symbolic Representations
more flexible = more powerful
done through propositions
Why is Categorisation Useful?
it allows us to know what to expect each time you en counter a member of a category = organisational system
how is information in mental representations organised?
from evidence form semantic priming studies
butter: bread, ball, xxx
Reasoning is
understanding the implications of our beliefs, something we do inherently
- intelligent thought
- problem solving/ decision making
Deductive Reasoning
(1 form of formal reasoning)
we start with a belief and figure out the implications of that belief… moving from general principles to specific instances
validity of conclusions follows from the premises
example of a syllogism
all animals have 4 legs (a premise).
Fluffy is an animal (premise) - therefore fluffy has 4legs (conclusion)
conclusion is drawn from a premise/s
inductive reasoning
- testing a hypothesis from data/ theories
- start with specifics and infer general principles
what influences out ability to reason deductively?
- conformation bias
- belief bias
- content of what we are reasoning about
belief bias
People judge whether the conclusion is plausible on its own, rather than following the logical rules.