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CLAC Review

The document summarizes research on how children acquire language. It covers several theories on the nature vs. nurture debate, including nativism proposed by Chomsky that argues language is innate, and behaviorism proposed by Skinner that argues language is learned. It also discusses different aspects of language including form, content, and function. Additionally, it reviews milestones in early language development from ages 0-2 years and experimental methods used to study infant language discrimination abilities, including the high amp sucking procedure and head turning paradigm.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
87 views21 pages

CLAC Review

The document summarizes research on how children acquire language. It covers several theories on the nature vs. nurture debate, including nativism proposed by Chomsky that argues language is innate, and behaviorism proposed by Skinner that argues language is learned. It also discusses different aspects of language including form, content, and function. Additionally, it reviews milestones in early language development from ages 0-2 years and experimental methods used to study infant language discrimination abilities, including the high amp sucking procedure and head turning paradigm.

Uploaded by

oremoralleriam
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CLAC Review 12/1/2016 2:06:00 PM

Week 1
 How do children acquire language?
o Nativism / Nature
 Chomsky: language is innate
 UG
 Poverty of the Stimulus (PoS)
 Inexplicable that children know so much without
explicitly teaching them
 Input insufficient for output
o Behaviorism / nurture
 Skinner: language is learned
 Not everything universal is innate
 Ex: coca cola
 Like, something can happen without being born
with it
 PoS  kids just creative?
 Language develops
 Ex: pidgin  creole
o Critical period: lenneberg
 “competence only achieved within limited time period
 modern view
 Instead, multiple “ideal” learning periods for diff
aspects of language
 Ex: phonology
 Different fields of study
o Levels of language:
 Form:
 Phonology : study of sounds
 Morphology : study of word forms
 Syntax: study of sentence structure
 Content:
 Semantics: study of meaning
 Function:
 Pragmatics : study of meaning ++

Week 2:
The Prism:
 Input : continuous sound signal
 The prism: inner grammar breaks it down into
 Output : meaningful components

No such thing as “correct” language


 Weinreich: as soon as something is a state, it’s a language
 Language is a lvigin organism that changes
 Avoiding age
o A lot of variation leads to averages with uninformative ranges
o Important to consider other things like parents, environment,
etc
o Learning a lang is like playing a game
 People don’t know on average what age people know
how to skip rope
 So language should be the same
 Kids learn gradually and at different rates
 Maybe not all language learned through input
o Sheeps : two possibilities for why
 Child’s experimenting
 Language is innate
 Cuz no adult ever said sheeps
 There’s creativity in language and also in meaning
o Recursion – can make up infinite structures
o Also infinite meanings
Genie
 Ideal test case for language experiment?
o Cuz Chomsky was a thing and linguistics was hot
o Was ideal cuz ideal case would be child without any input
 Cuz if language develops, then supports language is
innate
 Forbidden experiemtn “
o Can we teach her language?
 If yes
 No critical period
 Lenneberg done
 If no
 Needs some lang input before certain age and if
not you can never learn lang
 What does this say about nature/nurture
o Maybe not much
o Didn’t speak before she was found  against nature
o Never fully learned to speak  against nurture
 Ideal test case = forbidden experiment
o Was actively taught not to speak –neg input
o Ideal test case would have no input
o Positive input would be people encouraging her to spreak
o She might’ve had possible cognitive deficit from birth
 Not ideal cuz you don’t want any other reason that
language might’ve been affected by other problems

Week 3 : 0-2 years


the only fact sheet you should remotely know
Milestones
 Comprehension (passive)
o 12m – 10 words
o 14 – 50 w
o 18m - >100 words
 production (active)
o 12-20m -1st word
o 24 – 50w
 Grammatical divide
o Noun primacy – mostly nouns so like, chair, table, etc
o Then verbs
o Modifiers – like adjectives, temporal things (yesterday)
whatever, but mostly adjs
o Social words is smallest amount – greetings, yes/no,
etc
 BASICALLY
o Comprehension (passive) Production (active &
divided).
o Acquiring words  using words
High amp sucking procedure:
 Establish baseline with no stimuli
 Habituation phase
o Stimulation of one kind to teach child that sucking harder
triggers the stimulus
 Then add new stimuli
 Experimental phase: playing a new sound and seeing if that makes
the baby suck harder
 If diff sucking rate, we think we know that baby can distinguish the
sounds

Stuff about noises:


 Prosodic information: prosody, intonation, and rhythm.
o Source of discrimination in languges
 Infants prefer voice, songs with words over other noise
o Also mother’s voice over other females’

Head turning paradigm / preferential looking


 Same basic thing as above
 Baby distinguishing old vs new sounds
 At 6 months babies can discriminate
 At 12, they can’t tell non-native differences

Can’t assign meaning / mental states


 Can’t say they have a preference
 They just recognize things

Phonemic contrasts
2 hypotheses:
 Blank slate: kids must learn to discriminate the things valid in the
native language
o Kid needs to perform phonemic discriminations from birth
 Perceptual narrowing
o Kids learn ALL possible contrasts and must forget the
irrelevant ones (pruning)
o Evidence supports his one
 Babies do this by taking stats / notes /noticing
 Functional reorganization of sound space
o This thing that people might not pronounce sounds exactly
the same but my /b/ is still the same as your /b/
Word discrimination
 Issues for babies
o Words not said in isolation
 Need to place word boundaries
 Phonological bootstrapping:
o Split speech/continuous sound signal in units
 Phonemes and syllables
o Leads to word segmentation
 Kids rely on acoustic cues that signal prosodic
boundaries, like pauses
Word meanings
 Quine: gavagai problem
o The thing with the bunny, like if it jumps out what does it
mean?
o Word can refer to many things
 “Tools” for word meaning
o Disposition to establish “joint attention”
 Very important
 The first problem is just getting the kid’s attention
o Whole-object constraint
 X-refers to whole object, not part of object
o Mutual exclusivity bias
 If one object is X, other object are Y
New word could be a new thing but not the label for a
thing that you already know the label to
 But then like, how do synonyms work ?
 Or same words for different things?
o Money bank vs river bank
o Taxonomic constraint:
 Labels refer to objects of the same kind
 Not objects that are thematically related
 Something is like something else
Acquiring human lang vid
 Two major options to convey meaning
o Word order
o Inflections – changing word endings
o Almost every language uses these two things
 When did the boy say [how] he hurt himself?
o Interesting cuz no one ever explained to the child the
difference between the two sentences , they just know it
 Could be indicative of innate language
 Plato’s problem
o “Gap between knowledge and experience”
o How do children know stuff without being exposed to it
o PoS problem – how to children learn so much with being
taught (explicitly) so little
 Cuz no one sits down with them and teaches them
every little thing
 Learning how to walk
 Difference between ‘how’ and ‘when’ with the boy
o Chomsky linked it to language specifically
 Language is innate – that’s why there’s a gap between
knowledge and experience

Week 4 – first words/phrases


 “wauwau” referring to something furry
 Kids seem to create very subtle perceptual sets
o Perception over function
o Appearance dominates word making effort, not function
 Uh oh vs oops
o Oops is for agents / people
o Uh oh is for incidents
o Both indicate that children have expectations
 Indicates children know things don’t just “happen”
 Have knowledge about how things are supposed to go
 Makes children more active agents of language and not
just passive observers of whatever is going on
 Shows children can distinguish between 2 different
states
 “Daddy” & sneakers
o Words can refer to relationships between things
o Level of abstraction!
 Direct reference to relational reference
 Daddy doesn’t have to be there for the relational
reference
 Cuz direct reference would be like
 Point to pen – that’s a pen
o This is big shit because animals do not refer to objects so
creatively
 Humans unique in relational abstractions
o Opens realm for all the thematic relations (thing with kim and
the eggs)
 Ownership
 Agents
 Goals
 Instruments
Main takeaway – very ambiguous
 Hard to differentiate what a child means if they’re
assigning an attribute or not
o Two-word phases with relational nouns
 Agent-object, etc
 Remember what’s not possible
 Ex: Mommy daddy
 Conjunction not possible with two word phrases
cuz its democratic
 In language, things have to dominate other
things
o Ex: boathouse vs houseboat
o Conjunction is democaratic – nothing dominates anything
 The thing with the house boat
 Cuz in language, one thing dominates the other
o Maybe cuz we have this thing where language is structured in
a way where one thing is the head
 Merging:
o Creates modifier relation where one element is the main
element
 New york student film committee = type of committee
 Recursion: do the same operation again, and do it upon the same
structure
o the things
 Syntactical bootstrapping
o Syntax can help you figure out meaning (semantics)
 John daxed (intransitive) – john did something
 John kip the gorp (transitive) – something to another
thing
 John flims the gorp to the lirk (ditransitive) – doing
thing to a thing
Know that this is a process
Direct reference (one word phase)  relational reference(one word)  two
word phase (merging) – opens up world for recursion and stuff
 Just that idea that hey, they figured out something about language
o When they learn one thing dominates another, recursion and
merging and other things can happen.

Week 5 – Reference
 How do thigns and language connect?
 There’s pretend “absolute reference”
o No such thing as “absolute reference”
o There’s pretend absolute reference
 Absolute reference: look at THAT car
 One specific thing
 Variable reference: have you read THAT book
 Not the particular thing, but something like it
 More abstract
 From “a” to “the”
o General to specific
o Language providing tools
o Major mental shift
o Problem: “I went to a restaurant. The menu was terrible”
 You didn’t introduce the things
o Part-whole connection
 THE can refer to sub-parts of objects, based on world
knowledge
 Even proper names do not seem to directly refer to the
object/person (form of absolute reference)
o But names refer to an idea in people’s mind
o Label is a collection of ideas in people’s minds and they tend
to vary
 Person can be teacher, student, son/daughter, etc
 All the THERES
o Expression of satisfaction
o Comforting
o Deictic
o Existential
o Locative
 Means no direct relationship between language and thought
o Freedom to refer
o Sapir – Whorf hypothesis tho : language affects thought
 40 inuit words for snow because snow was snow
prevalent in their environment that they had to label it
 Environment was controlling their language
 BUT English can still communicate types of snow,
just with more words/in a different way
 Color perception – if a language doesn’t have words to
describe different shades/colors, they perceive it in the
same way
 Sky blue, navy blue vs just blue
 Hopi don’t experience time cuz they don’t have time
words
 Aboriginal spatial orientation with the cardinal directions
But still trying to change minds today
 Chairman  chairperson, in the name of equality
 Spatial orientation
 Aboriginal example – north, south, east west
 You have fly on your north leg or whatever
 Language is set up that way so affects their
thinking to always know where they are
 English uses self to orient themselves
 Relationship between language and cognition is still unclear
basically
o It matters
o Cuz if child has grammatical deficit, not equal to cognitive
deficit
 Then that means SLI is a thing cuz, if you give them
nonverbal task, they’ll be fine then it’s like what

Week 6 : Morphology / Recursion


Morphology
 Agglutinative language
o Gluing stuff together
o Heavily inflectional language
 Analytic (English)
o Using a lot of function words that inflections/compounding
does in other languages
o But English still has some inflection and derivation tho
 Inflection modifies meaning, not changing it
o Change  changes (still noun, just plural)
o Does not change word class
 Ex: change /change(s)
o English has inflections for
 Past-tense
 Aspect (not completed actions)
 So like, he is eating
 Derivation: forming new word
o Happy vs (un)happy
o Sometimes changes word class
Recursion
 Repetition is not recursion
 Evolves from Merge
o Merge brings words together
o Recursion creates new structure
 Central idea to generative grammar
o Generates more of itself from within itself
 Unique aspect of human language ?
 Know how to give recursion examples at every level – know the
example and the thing in parentheses
o Word level
 Anti-anti-missile missile (prefixation)
 Big, black, strange bear (adjective)
 Changing meaning (kind of bear) but same
structure (all adjectives)
 Student film group festival (compound)
o Phrase level
 Possessive
 john’s friend’s car’s thing
 Prep phrases
 In the corner in the cabinet under the thing
 Conjunction:
 I came and I saw and I shat myself
o Clause level
 Infinitive Verbs
 John wants to start to go to sing
 Finite verbs
 Mary thinks that john thinks…
 Almost no recursive possessives in adult/child language
 Principle: all languages have recursion
 Parameter: some languages build left, right, both
 BUT
o Everett: if Piraha doesn’t have recursion, recursion is not
universal
o Chomsky said they might have potential to use it, they just
don’t use it
 They can walk, but they prefer to crawl
 So why bother trying to find commonalities
o Cuz if language is not nature and born with it, then what the
heck
o Could prove innateness of language principle is wrong
Week 8
Ellipsis: allows “efficient” communication
 Omission of a word/words/ from a sentence
 Makes it syntactically, but not semantically incomplete
o Structure is incomplete, but still makes sense
 Rule: Words over visual stuff
o The thing with the cookies and the fruit
o Bowl of cookies next to fruit.
 “Here is some fruit” (takes cookies)
 “Did I take some?”
 Distributive ellipsis
o John saw his mother and so did Bill
 But who’s mother ?
o Every noun gets their own attribute
 John saw his mother and bill saw his too
 Ragged endpoint
o Reconstruct and replace sometimes a little less, sometimes a
little more
o Varies between speakers in interpretations
 Shorter not equal to easier
o Varied reconstruction
o Can lead to ambiguity
o Children offered shorter sentences may still not understand if
the relevant part is left out

Plurals invite abstractions
 Thinking about categories
o Do you like bananas?
 Need to understand asking about “concept” of bananas
 Plural distributivity : similar to ellipsis
o Everybody went [to their own] home
o But everybody went to HIS home
 Single, plural, and exhaustive
o The thing with the girls and the sweaters
 Pointing to one girl in a sweater vs all of them
(exhaustive)

Don’t make the leap from grammatical to mental deficit


Modularity of Mind proposal
 Module for language
 Module for cognition
 Heavily intertwined , but essentially separate
o One can trigger another
 This is just Roeper’s proposal
o Not a known fact so
 Piaget thought problem with language = problem with cognition
o Leap from grammatical deficit to mental deficit
o But roeper says don’t extend justdgement of one module to
another

Week 9 : Theory of Mind


 Mental States: independent of the real world and independent of
the mental states of others
o So like, you can think it’s raining when it’s not
 False Belief: belief that is in fact not true, based on the real world
 ToM is the ability to attribute mental states to people other than
yourself
 Two methods to assess ToM using false beliefs
o Unexpected contents / smarties
o Change of Location / Sally Ann Task
 In general, children ~ 4 years old pass and younger ones fail
 Why does it develop late – just developmentally generally? Well
maybe because of:
o Executive function
 Managing two perspectives too hard
 Reality pulls to hard and can’t suppress the other
one
o Memory : maybe not enough memory / too complex
o Inference: two independent facts
 Trouble bridging ideas in two different things.
o Language development:
 Embedding (subordination)
 Mental state verbs (think, feel)
 ToM – type of cognition
o Heavily influenced by language
 3 options for relationship between language and ToM:
o Factor X facilitates ToM and language
 Internally: developments in memory and executive
functioning
Externally: more socially sophisticated activites (ex:
school)
o ToM facilitates language
 Joint attention facilitates world-to-world mapping
 Non-verbal false-belief task
 Cuz the two tasks are very heavily reliant on
language
 Longer looks for illogical searches compared to
logical searches
 When the person looks in the box with
nothing in it
 Interpretation: infancts have expectations
regarding actions
o Violating those expectations (illogical
searches) triggers longer looking time
 So although they can’t express it in
language, they’re expressing ToM
o Language facilitates ToM, but what aspect of language?
 Semantics: mental state verbs
 Learning what “think” means and all that
 Syntax: embedded structure
 Can hold more than one truth value
 Allows more than one perspective
 Most salient connection hearing the word “that”
 So child makes connection that “that” is a
key word for expressing mental things to
what’s happening in the world
 Memory for complements task
 Report on thought content
 Communicative and mental state verbs share the
structure of subordination
 Thought he found his ring, but it was really a
bottlecap
 ToM and ASD
o Question is if ASD people have theory of mind
o Happe’s assessment of “able” austistics
 If they pass  TOM
 If they fail  TOM is “hack out” strategy
 Failure of TOM in individuals could be because
they memorized a task

Week 10: Cognition


 Thinking in symbols
 Literally the moment we step away from reference, things become
symbols
 Representational insight
o Knowledge that an entity can stand for something other than
itself
o Like the child saying “daddy” and looking at the sneakers –
symbolic relationship between the dad and the sneakers
 DeLoache Studies
o Using scale model to find toy in large room
 Using scale model in representational way
o Retrieval 1: find toy in real rooom
o Retrieval 2: back to symbol/model: where was the toy?
 Important to eliminate confound of just forgetting / bad
memory
o Saying the room “shrank” increased success because it
eliminated “symbolic” aspect of it
 Removes problem of dual representation
 Thinking about entity 2 different ways at the
same time
 Appearance / reality distinction
o Things not always what they seem
o Kids have this thing where if you change the appearance, you
change the reality
 That thing where the grandma can’t drive grandpa’s
car, so the kid tell her to dress up like grandpa
o DeVries study
 Putting dog mask on a cat changes identity of the
animal
o Dual encoding problem?
 Creating sets is based on perception
 Perception is a very stable thing
 Children rely on appearance, so how it looks,
that’s how it is
 Fantasy / reality distinction
o Is pretending real to children?
 Differentiate between imagined and experienced events
o Harris studies: imagining bunny / monster in a box
 Kids know at one level distinction between imagination
and reality
 BUT still don’t exclude possiblilty of actual danger
o Do adults always make this distinction ?
 Symbolic play: substituting one thing for another
 Sociodramatic play: elaborate social form of symbolic play
o Playing school, doctor, etc
 Piaget:
o Single cognitive system as opposed to roeper’s modularity of
mind
o Child is active, self-motivated agent
 Not just a mini-adult
o Equilibration model: the thing with the boat and the duck
 Cognitive schemes need to be kept in balance
 Disequilibrium is intrinsically in balance
 Assimilation: incorporate new info into already existing
schemes
 Accommodation: change scheme to incorporate new
info
4 different stages (know them in the right order)
 Sensorimotor : reflexes to goal-directed behavior
o So purposefully doing things
 Characteristics of the other three
o Operations drive actions
 Operations are internalized actions (covert/mental), no
trial and error
So going from “ I need to actually try this thing to see if
it will work” to “I’ll just think about it to see if it’ll work
instead of actually doing it”
o Use of symbols
o Rules and reversibility: operations can be reversed or
compensated with another operation
 Preoperational: 2-7: almost entire language period
o Perceptual centration
 Influenced by how a thing seems (Appearance) not
what it must be (logic)
 The thing with the milk in the red glass
o Conservation: knowing entity is the same despite changing
forms
o Egocentric: others see the world as they do
 ToM and false belief tasks (4y/os)
 Concrete Operations: 7-11
o Perception becomes less egocentric
o Can consider 2 dimensions at once
o Still need the environment cuz can’t think about thinking
o Able to pass conservation tasks and other tests
o Feel disequilibrium and contradiction when conservation is
reversed
 Formal operations:
o Reflection
o Hypothetico-deductive reasoning : true symbolic thinking
 Don’t necessarily need the environment to think
 Reflection : thinking about thinking
 Going from general to specific in hypothesis
 Inductive
 So like, if you’re in a new city and you need to
take the train, you can apply general knowledge
about train systems to assume something about
the new system
 Conservation tasks
o Know the format of the conservation tasks in logic language
(B  B’, etc)
 A=B
 B  B’
 A ? B’
 Kids have greater cognition than piaget though
 Perhaps it overestimates formal operations in adults

Week 12 – Bilingualism / AAE


Within English grammar, there are inconsistencies
 Our grammar consists of multiple subgrammars
o Fundamentally bilingual?
 Language vs dialect? Very ill-defined
o Idea of bilingualism may be more complicated than just
“english vs chinese”
o Language / dialect not equal to intelligence/education
 Can’t make heinous assumptions about anyone’s
language use
 “Everyone that speaks MAE likes tomatoes”
 Although there is language variation and differ in degree of
expression/precision, that does not mean same concept cannot be
expressed in another language
o Unheimlich – doesn’t mean you can’t understand the feeling,
just need more words in English to express it
o Relates to modularity of mind
 If language and cognition were the same, then it would
suggest that if you have to say things in a different
way, you think of that thing in a different way too
 But no
 Language changes
o In English: no semantic present tense in syntactic present
tense
 AAE has a system
 Perspectives :
o AAE is same system, but has a different meaning from MAE
o Progressive dimension – deletion of 3rd person
o Contradiction dimension: could be root of racial biases
 Says it’s 100% different
 Code-switching
12/1/2016 2:06:00 PM

Essay questions
 More critical reasoning and thinking
 Describing and linking things
 Argumentative

Multiple choice will be like 60%


 Facts
 Specific theories
12/1/2016 2:06:00 PM

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