Language Development PART 2 (LECTURE 9) Flashcards

(39 cards)

1
Q

There are components of language that help us learn it better (4)

A
  1. Sounds
  2. Words
  3. Combinations
  4. Context
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2
Q

Sounds

A

Individual bits of language

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3
Q

Phonemes

A

The elementary units of any spoken language

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4
Q

Learning a language requires able to _______ and _____ its smallest parts

A

Distinguish and identify

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5
Q

Are the same amount of phonemes used in every language?

A

Across all languages there are ~200 phonemes, within any single language only a subset is used e.g. english = 44, Japanese 29 etc.

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6
Q

The first vocalizations for infants start at around __-__ weeks, babies will start “______”

A

6-8 weeks, cooing

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7
Q

Cooing

A

Making drawn out and varied vowel sounds

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8
Q

Early practice with producing speech sounds allow the infants to (2)

A
  1. Gain motor control over the vocal system
  2. Increase awareness that vocalization elicit responses from others
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9
Q

Babbling occurs at around __-__ months, and this is:

A

6-10 months, strings of repeated “bits” of language

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10
Q

What do babies babble?

A

Their native language! They take the sounds, rhythms, and patterns of intonation of the language around them

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11
Q

Manual babbling

A

Native signing infants produce repetitive hand movements that are smaller components of full signs

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12
Q

So usually infants are already _____ speakers and listeners long before first words!

A

Native

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13
Q

There are two main puzzles for language learners to solve (2)

A
  1. Segmentation
  2. Reference
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14
Q

Segmentation

A

How we tell words apart

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15
Q

Language reflects ________ patterns

A

Statistical patterns! — some words/sounds occur together more often

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16
Q

Language reflects _______ patterns e.g.?

A

Statistical patterns

E.g. distributional properties as clues “Pretty // Baby”

17
Q

Segmentation evidence:

8 month olds heard 4 made up words (bidaku golabu…) for 2 minutes no pauses. They would turn their heads when:

A

They heard a previously heard word e.g. “Golabu” but also on part words e.g. “Bubida”

18
Q

Reference

A

What do words mean?

19
Q

Reference evidence:

Bergelson and Swingley (2012) found that 6 month olds when presented with two objects did what?

A

Looked to an object that corresponded to its name!

20
Q

For word learning to be possible, learners must have ________ __________ that limit number of meanings they consider

A

Default assumptions

21
Q

How could we find out what words mean? (5)

A
  1. Fast mapping
  2. Whole-object bias
  3. Shape bias
  4. Cross situational word learning
  5. Mutual exclusivity
22
Q

Fast mapping

A

How children can learn new words after even just one exposure/or referred to indirectly e.g. pointed at

23
Q

Whole-object bias

A

How children assume the word refers to the whole object and not a part, action, or property

24
Q

Shape bias

A

How Children extend novel words to objects of the same shape

25
Cross situational word learning
How we map words to a common thing across many separate instances
26
Mutual exclusivity
The assumption that each thing will have only one name, children can infer what a new word is by ruling others out
27
To express complexity with language, we must first _______ words. ______ gives us rules and structures for _________
Combine Syntax Combinations
28
Children are sensitive to _______ before they start producing it themselves, and can use the rules of ______ to help with learning new words after even meanings
Syntax
29
Holophrasic period are _____ _______ _________ There is no _______ (until __ years old)
1. Single word utterances 2. no syntax 3. until 2 years old
30
Telegraphic speech: first sentences are ____-_____ _____________ Show ______!
1. Two-word utterances 2. Show syntax!
31
If children have knowledge of syntax rules, they should be able to _____ it in new cases they haven’t heard before e.g. “This is a wug” “Now there is another one, There are two of them. there are two _____”
Apply, wugs
32
Words
Which bits go together and what do they mean?
33
Combinations
Putting words together changes their meanings
34
Context
The tone, place, time, and people involved
35
Pragmatic knowledge
Understanding the different ways language can be used and what it means
36
Pragmatic knowledge consists of (4)
1. Contextual variations 2. Cultural rules 3. Emotional tone 4. Communicative intent
37
Children use ___-_____ of others to infer the meaning of ambiguous statements
Eye-gaze
38
Older preschools can track the ______ of an ambiguous statement to figure out a speaker’s intention
Emotion
39
Turn-taking! Know something about the ______, ________, ________ use of language that supports our early ________ ________.
Shared, communicative, reciprocal Conversational development