lecture: psycholinguistics professor dr. neal r. norrick _____________________________________
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Psycholinguistics. Universität des Saarlandes Dept. 4.3: English Linguistics SS 2009. Lecture: Psycholinguistics Professor Dr. Neal R. Norrick _____________________________________. 1. Introduction. Psycholinguistics = the study of language and mind mind versus brain - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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Lecture: Psycholinguistics Professor Dr. Neal R. Norrick
_____________________________________
Psycholinguistics
Universität des SaarlandesDept. 4.3: English Linguistics
SS 2009
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1. Introduction
Psycholinguistics = the study of language and mind
mind versus brain • mind as understanding, senses, spirit, psyche• mind as total of cognitive capacities
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Psycholinguistics is:
study of language production & comprehension
reflecting distinction of
competence versus performance
Psycholinguistics versus neighbor disciplines:
Sociolinguistics, Neurolinguistics,
Cognitive Linguistics
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2. Biological foundations of speech
2.1 Organs of speech
humans have no specific organs of speech,
but we find specialization for speech in
many parts of system
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2.2 Nervous system
central versus peripheral
descending, versus ascending, motor sensory
but both systems function together in complex activity, so that brain gets feedback on effects
nerve development from birth to two yearsreflects growth in motor and language skills
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special areas of brain for language skills
organization of perception, language
and articulation in the brain:
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motor cortex:
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2.3 Brain Lateralization
specialization of function in left and right
hemispheres as part of evolutionary
development in brain
still, corpus callosum connects the two
hemispheres
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3. Linguistics and mental entities
3.1 Words and concepts
• word meaning as mental image• words as signs of concepts, labels for concepts• concepts might be figures, images, models etc• concepts include perceptual and functional
information
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Miller & Johnson-Laird's concept:
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3.2 Sounds and phonemes
phonemes as psychologically real entities
abstract phoneme /p/
versus positionally variant allophones:
• aspirated [ph] word-initial, as in pill• preglottalized [p] word-final, as in lip• unaspirated [p-] after initial s, as in spill
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these allophones are predictable variants
they don't distinguish meanings
ability to distinguish meanings defines
phonemes
hence: minimal pair test
pill - bill
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but experiments show:words are recognized faster than phonemes
we recognize the letter b and the sound /b/faster in the word bat than in isolation
words are more salient than phonemes
suprasegmental features are alsopsychologically salient
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intonation distinguishes statements
and questions
Sally's here. versus Sally's here?
stress focuses on any constituent in questions
Sally gave the new car to Judy today?• can question whether it was Sally (not Suzy),• whether she gave (not loaned) the car,• whether it was the new (not the old) car etc
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3.4 Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis
Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis sees language and
human cognition as related in non-arbitrary
ways
Sapir 1921, 1929, 1949, Whorf 1950, 1956
proposed a relationship between language,
meaning, culture, and personality, generally
called the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis
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The strong version of the hypothesis says our language determines our perception. We see the things and processes our language has names for and ignore or cannot see what our language doesn't name.
The weak version of the hypothesis says our language influences our perception. We attendto the things and processes our language has names for and tend to ignore or find it difficult to attend to what our language doesn't name.
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Slobin's ‘thinking for speaking’ notes that any
language system enforces certain choices in
grammar and lexis, no matter how our underlying
thought patterns work,
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Compare:
I like it, mir gefällt es, mi piace, I'm cold, mich friert, mir ist kalt, isch hann kalt, j'ai froid
If we must always attend to certain distinctionsand ignore others, in speaking and thinking,shouldn't that influence the way we think?
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4. Words in the Mental Lexicon
Mental Lexicon versus dictionary• words accessible via sound, meaning,
related words
Mental Lexicon versus encyclopedia• Encyclopedia contains all kinds of knowledge,
usually unnecessary for normal word use,
e.g. for dog
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4.1 Word Association Tests (WATs)
Experiments show:
we recognize concrete words like table
faster than abstract words like trouble
table chair faster, more consistent
trouble bad lower, less consistent
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WATs also show paradigmatic versus
syntagmatic relations:
• paradigmatic apple, pear, banana, plum• syntagmatic apple, red, juicy, eat
in WATs:• adults respond paradigmatically:
pillow bed• children respond syntagmatically:
pillow soft
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WATs show faster recognition after associated words:
we recognize roof faster after housethan after some unrelated word like apple
so Lindsay & Norman (1972) postulate
lexical networks
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4.2 Tip-of-the-Tongue Phenomena
Thinking on Tip-of-the-Tongue (TOT) phenomena begins with James (1890)
James speaks of “a gap that is intensively active” in consciousness when we try to recall aforgotten name.
Meringer and Mayer (1895), Fromkin (1973) keptpersonal catalogues of error types to gather natural data.
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Brown and McNeill (1966) collected intuitions on remembering in diary studies, e.g.
unable to recall the name of the street on which a relative lives,
one of us thought of Congress and Corinth and Concord
and then looked up the address and learned that it was Cornish.
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Burke et al. (1991) write, “When a TOT occurs, a lexical node in a semantic system becomesactivated, giving access to semantic information about the target word, but at least some phonological information remains inaccessible.”
Subjects in the TOT state often report that a word related to the target comes repeatedly and involuntarily to mind, yielding ‘blockers’,‘interlopers’or ‘persistent alternates’, e.g.
sexton or sextet for sextant
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Burke et al. (1991) identify a semantic system or
network of nodes connecting concepts • the concept chastity is connected with “is a virtue,”
“take a vow of” etc • the concept baker with “bake bread” “get up early”
“sell cakes” “knead dough” etc
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4.3 Discourse, frames, prototypes
Cognitive linguists look at discourse contexts where
words occur, e.g. if, for an item like roof,
The house needs a new roof
Then "house has a roof" is part of discourse frame
Consider also frame effects:
We saw an old house.
The roof was in need of repair.
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Consider typical collocations and metaphors:
she has no roof over her head
- for 'no house'
we're finally under one roof
- for 'in the same house‘
Moreover, Rosch and her co-workers have shown: • some properties are more salient than others• some members of a category are more typical
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it may be impossible to define certain words without
exemplification,
e.g. colors, fruits, games etc
instead of: "a fruit is the edible part of a plant etc"
we find: "a fruit is like an apple, a peach or a banana"
word meanings and categories are generally not
defined by features or propositions, but by
prototypes
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Testing for prototypes
A. Ask subjects to identify the most typical bird:
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Prototype Effects:
prototype: A trout is a typical fish
marginal: A tadpole is a kind of a fish
non-member: Their daughter is a regular fish
Note: real members don't fit here:
*This trout is a regular fish
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5. First Language Acquisition
Natural acquisition with no special learning necessary
critical period resulting from a combination of factors:
• development of connections between nerve cells• myelination of nerve cells
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• lateralization of brain functions• dominance of left hemisphere• corresponding development of motor skills• general cognitive stages of development
(Piaget)
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5.1 Developmental sketch
Age Language General
(months)
9 babbling crawling
10 first words standing,
recurrent, maintained
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Age Language General(months)
11 5-10 recurrent words first steps, fulfills requests like: recognizesbring me the blue ball pictures inshow me the big red dog books
12 5 distinct vowels starts walking5 distinct consonants
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Age Language General
(months)
13 recognizable words running,
daddy nein ball climbing furniture
allgone
14 imitations: horse, train simple puzzles,
reduplications: turns book pages
choochoo,
byebye, taktak ‘clock’
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Age Language General
(months)
16 recognizes own name points to himself:
20+ words Where's Nicky?
18 vocabulary explosion climbs stairs
2-word units: without rail
ducky allgone
Nicky haben
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Age Language General
(months)
20 3-word units: hangs on monkey
Nicky cookie haben bars, points to
also: eyes, nose, mouth
haben Nicky cookie
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Age Language General
(months)
22 verb + particle: dramatic
lock up / deck zu play,
4-word units: stuffed Mami Auto fahren kauft animals,
Inni gute Nacht sagen dolls
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Age (months): 24
Language General
verb endings: Inni spuckt bisschen kicks soccer ball,
statement: Nicky auch essen plays hide-n-seek,
question: Nicky auch essen, ja? draws details:
command: Nicky auch essen ears, tails, wheels
word-formation: cutter ‘knife’
auskleben ’tear apart’
umwärts
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Age Language General (months)
32 first real narrative: builds Legos,It was a wooden lamby draws people and it was on the floor and housein a barn with chimneyand they took it home and windowsand they washed itand it wasn't ugly
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Age (months): 36
Phonetics• voiced th: initial okay in the this etc• medial v in other• voiceless th: initial s in sing• final f in both• vocalizes final l and r• mispronunciations: amimals, cimamon, pasketti
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Morphology• double plurals: mens, feets, mices• double preterites: sawed, stooded• regularized preterites: goed, sitted• reverse word-formations: popcorner, mowgrasser
Syntax• negation: I see it not, That doll sits not right• questions: What it did? What the lady said?• counting: 1 2 3 4 5 6 20 14 fiveteen 16
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Mean Length of Utterance (MLU)
as standard measure of first language development as opposed to age
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5.2 Natural order of acquisition:
5.2.1 "Why mama and papa?“
Jakobson's order for phoneme acquisition
• in babbling, children produce all kinds of sounds and sound combinations; many children produce imitations after babbling
• but around age 2, children narrow their sound repertory and begin to produce sounds of their language in fixed order
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order reflects an attempt to create the clearest possible set of distinctions at any given point, within the given physiological limits
• this order of acquisition also reveals parallel between different languages• most salient distinction is between Vowels (V) and Consonants (C)
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Vowels are characteristically open and resonant: • the prototypical V is a
Consonants are characteristically closed and obstruent:
• stops are prototypical Cs• the prototypical stop is p
the prototypical syllable is CV: maximizing the C-V distinction, a child's first syllable should be pa given children's tendency to reduplication, a child's first real word should be papa
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after the Cs p and m , the child usually acquires t , then the third voiceless stop k and so on: p m t k
child moves on to ever larger patterns with increasing numbers of distinctive features
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5.2.2 Order of acquisition for syntax
at first, kids produce:• one-word utterances with holistic meaning• two-word utterances with no fixed word order• three-word utterances without inflections• prepositions or other markers
then they begin to acquire syntax
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Brown's (1973) order of acquisition for syntax:
1. present progressive girl playing 2. prepositions ball in water 3. plural toys, dishes 4. irregular past tense went, told 5. possessive Ann's toys 6. articles a dog, the dog 7. regular past tense jumped, hugged, wanted
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8. regular 3rd person she goes, talks, watches 9. irregular 3rd person she does, has10. auxiliary be: I am, you are, she is11. contracted auxiliary I'm, you're, she's
order of acquisition as reflecting general learning strategies and stages of development (Piaget) or as evidence of innate language acquisition device (Chomsky)
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5.4 Innateness Debate
Chomsky (1986: 150) writes:
What we "know innately" are the principles of the
various subsystems [phonology, syntax, thematic
structure etc.] of S0 [the initial state of the child's mind]
and the manner of their interaction, and the
parameters associated with these principles. What
we learn are the values of the parameters and the
elements of the periphery (along with the lexicon to
which similar considerations apply).
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That is:
We "know innately" as part of Universal Grammar (UG)
that sentences will have noun phrases and verb
phrases in some order, but we have to learn the order.
Chomsky argues children must know innately what
they can not learn by observation.
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Poverty of Stimulus Argument (POS):Some patterns in language are unlearnable from positive evidence alone (due to the hierarchicalnature of languages)
You are happy. Are you happy?
possible rules: 1) the first auxiliary verb in the sentence moves
to the front2) the main auxiliary verb in the sentence moves
to the front
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but compare:
The girl who is on the bus is happy.
*Is the girl who __ on the bus is happy?
Is the girl who is on the bus __ happy?
Children don't see sentences like this enough to
decide which rule works but nobody ever chooses
the wrong rule
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Grammaticality judgments:
Who do you think Mary knows?Who do you think that Mary knows?Who do you think knows Mary?*Who do you think that knows Mary?
Note translations!
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Consider the acquisition of vocabulary:
Webster’s dictionary: 500,000 words
Average educated person’s vocabulary: 40,000 words
(+ another 40,000 proper names, idioms, sayings)
thus: monolingual speakers acquire about 4,000 words per year or about 10 words every day to age 20
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5.5 Slobin's Operating Principles & Universals of Acquisition
Whether parts of language acquisition are innate or not, developing kids seem to follow specific strategies and their acquisition processes reveal universals
Operating PrinciplesA. Identify word units. B. Forms of words may be systematically modified. C. Pay attention to the ends of words. D. There are elements which encode relations between words.
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Universal 1: • postposed forms learned before preposed
forms• articles before nouns less salient than noun
suffixes
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6. Second Language Acquisition6.1 Contrastive Analysis
growing out of work by Fries (1945) and Weinreich (1953) most work on Second Language Acquisition in the 40's and 50's shared the assumptions of Contrastive Analysis (Lado 1957)
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Contrastive Analysis based on transfer • from Native Language (NL) to Target Language (TL) or First Language (L1) to Second Language(L2)• shared structures facilitate acquisition• distinct structures cause problems • positive transfer when L1 and L2 share structures
e.g. Det Adj N structure in NP in English and German
the mean dog - der böse Hund
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negative transfer when L1 and L2 have different structures
e.g. Adv V NP in German versus Adv NP V in English
Morgen fahren wir nach Hause Tomorrow we go home
so research in Second Language Acquisition tended to revolve around comparison of language pairs
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Language Acquisition was seen as developing a set of habits to be practiced in accordance with Behaviorist Theory
but researchers found errors not predictable bylanguage differences, and the psycholinguisticprocess of language acquisition can't be describedsolely in terms of linguistic products
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6.2 Approximative Systems and Interlanguage
In the 1960's, linguists rejected Behaviorism and
became interested in mentalistic theories
evidence was mounting for a third system between
L1 and L2
Nemser (1971) recognized an Approximative System
for the learner with features of both L1 and L2
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Selinker (1972) introduced the term Interlanguagefor this individual language system
Interlanguages are highly variable, due to:• limited cognitive attention, given so much to learn
and remember simultaneously • Learners’ lack of knowledge of rules• simultaneous pull from L1 and L2 • they represent transitional stages of development
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but L2 tends to fossilize at some stage, due to:
1. Negative transfer from L1
e.g. putting temporal Adv before locative Adv
*They went last week to Berlin.
2. Overgeneralization of L2 rules e.g. extending progressive pattern to stative verbs
*I'm knowing him a long time
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6.3 Error Analysis
concern with interlanguage and errors it contains and their relation gave rise to research in Error Analysis
1. Researchers first look for idiosyncrasies in learner's production
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Error Analysis ends up as a method of describing data, but not a psycholinguistic theory of language acquisition
Error Analysis loses sight of the whole picture of
developing competence in L2 by focusing on errors;• we could instead equate knowledge of L2 with
fluency and understandability rather than lack of errors
• or we could instead focus on what learners do rightand test to see if they do it right intuitively
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6.4 Innateness, Input, Natural Order of
Acquisition in L2
The Innateness Debate from Child Language Research carries over to research in Second Language Acquisition
Does the Language Acquisition Device (LAD) work for
L2 as for L1?If the LAD is at work, there should be a Natural Order of
Acquisition in L2 as in L1.
Could L2 learners simply reset the parameters from L1?
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Dulay & Burt (1973) posit natural order of
acquisition in L2 parallel to what Brown (1973)
found for L1
at least learners with the same L1 background go
through the same stages in acquiring L2
1. plural -s on nouns: the books2. progressive -ing on verbs: they driving3. forms of main verb be: this is London,
she was there
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4. forms of auxiliary be: she's driving
5. articles a and the: a cat, the dog
6. irregular past tenses: went, ate, came
7. 3rd person sing pres -s: she waits
8. possessive -s: Sally's truck
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6.5 Krashen's Input Hypothesis and
the Monitor Model
Language Acquisition versus Language Learning
subconscious acquisition like children's L1
acquisition
• not affected by correction• not based on formally learned rules
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Input Hypothesis
We acquire i + 1, the next rule along the natural order,
by understanding messages containing i + 1.
(a necessary but not sufficient condition for acquisition)
i = current level in phonology, morphology, syntax, lexis
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7. Bilingualism
individual bilingualism versus societal bilingualism
Compare: bilingualism versus diglossia (Ferguson)
balanced versus unbalanced bilingualism
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dominant, usually first, native language
versus
weaker, second or foreign language (second or foreign language for special purpose)
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A. Coordinate: L1 and L2 acquired
in separate contexts– each system is complete in
itself– person functions as
monolingual in both communities
7.4 Two languages in one brain7.4.1 Types of bilinguals
Weinreich (1953) distinguished three kinds of bilingualism
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B. Compound: L1 and L2 acquired in same context
• the two systems are merged• person doesn't function as monolingual in either community• person may experience interference from L1 to L2 and from L2 to L1
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C. Subordinate: L2 acquired based on L1
– only one system
– person functions as monolingual only in L1
– person experiences interference only from
L1 to L2
Notice that Weinreich’s typology works only at the lexical level, but bilinguals may experience interference at all levels from phonetics up to semantics.
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As Paradis (1979, 1985) shows, bilinguals come in many types
Bilinguals may differ with regard to:• manner of acquisition (formal, informal)• mode of acquisition (oral, written)• method of acquisition
(deductive, inductive, analytic, global)• age of acquisition (during or after critical period)• stage of acquisition• degree of proficiency
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• frequency and modes of use• language-specific features of L1 & L2 • sharing features and rules at various levels
on every linguistic level, structures might be shared or separate
e.g. if L1 speaker produces L2 perfectly, except for phonetics, i.e. has lots of interference from L1 to L2
at the level of phonetics, we could model thesituation as follows:
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8. Language comprehension
means understanding what we hear and read
comprehension as active search for coherence and sense based on expectations arising from context,
not a passive item-by-item recording and analysis of words in a linear sequence.
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meaning and real-world expectations play a moreimportant role than grammar
top-down versus bottom-up processing
Until the age of four, kids interpret a-d the same way; even adults require longer to respond to c, d:
a. The cat chased the mouse.b. The mouse was chased by the cat.c. The mouse chased the cat.d. The cat was chased by the mouse.
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8.1 Comprehension of words
Parallel Distributed Processing (PDP):
separate, simultaneous and parallel processes work to identify words
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by pronunciation: to recognize homophones
leadN and ledV pst
by spelling: to recognize homographs
windN and windV
by grammar: to recognize smell as noun or verb while hear can only function as verb
by semantics: synonyms like little and small antonyms like little and big hyponyms like car versus vehicle etc
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Bathtub Effect:
recall is best for beginnings and ends of words, like
the head and feet of a person which are visible
though the middle remains submerged in the tub
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8.2 Comprehension of sentences
Chomsky proposed Generative Transformational
Grammar (TG) as a model of Competence,
suggesting that psycholinguists should figure out how
Performance could be related to his model
Psycholinguists began to test for transformational
complexity
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Sentences involving more transformations like
PASSIVE, NEGATION, QUESTION FORMATION etc
should be harder to comprehend than sentences
involving fewer transformations
processing time should increase for sentences a-e:
a. Judy called the boy.
b. Judy didn't call the boy.
c. The boy was called by Judy.
d. The boy was not called by Judy.
e. Wasn't the boy called by Judy?
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They found that negatives were harder to process than either passives or questions, even though negation seemed like a simpler transformation
Subjects seemed to have difficulty processing negatives generally.
Consider the difficulty of:
It's not true that Wednesday never comes after a day that isn't Tuesday.
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Subjects also processed passives more easily than
actives, if the passives made more sense, e.g.
The struggling swimmer rescued the lifeguard.
The struggling swimmer was rescued
by the lifeguard.
Apparently, semantics was more important than
derivational complexity as predicted by TG analysis
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Garden Pathing is most obvious when we have to backtrack after an unexpected switch, as in sentence a; the addition of this in sentence b, or a comma, as in sentence c, eliminates the problem
a. Since Jay always jogs a mile seems like a short distance to him.
b. Since Jay always jogs a mile this seems like a short distance to him.
c. Since Jay always jogs, a mile seems like a short distance to him.
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Tests revealed other syntactic processing differences.
Right-branching constructions are easy to process:
This is the cat that chased the rat that stole the cheese that lay in the cupboard.
Here each construction is closed before the next is added.
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But left-branching constructions are difficult.
The rat the cat chased stole the cheese.
Left-branching requires that the listener keep the first
construction open (in short-term memory) while
processing the second. Adding a third makes
processing impossible because of the demands it
places on short-term memory.
The cheese the rat the cat chased stole lay
in the cupboard.
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8.3 Comprehension of metaphor
metaphors consist of three parts: tenor, vehicle, ground
tenor vehiclebillboards are warts on the landscape
ground (tertium comparationis) = 'ugly protrusions on some surface'
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8.4 Comprehending sentences
Given-New Contract (Clark & Clark 1977):
Listeners expect information in a regular pattern. Coherent texts generally exhibit a characteristic
information flow:
• begin each utterance with given information • then move on to new information
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e.g. The ballerina captivated a musician duringher performance. The one who the ballerina captivated was
the trombonist.
(with the ballerina as given and the rest of the first sentence as new)
In the second sentence, all the information is given, except the fact that the musician was a trombonist. Hearing the first sentence reduces processing time for the second.
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REMINDER
Klausuranmeldung
Neue Studiengänge: on HIS LSF POS - July 01-10, 2009
Alte Studiengänge / ERASMUS / exchange students: Please write me an email @ [email protected]
(including full name, Matrikelnummer, Studiengang, information on your requirements – if you do need a Schein)
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PREPARING FOR THE EXAM
• review of this semester’s topics in today’s lecture
• additional tutorial session on July 21, 09during the regular lecture time in the regularHörsaal (Matthias Heyne)
Please prepare questions or topics you’d like to revisit!
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EVALUATION
Thank you for your participation!