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UNIVERSITY OF MERSİN,2010

UNIVERSITY OF MERSİN,2010. DIDEM YAPICI NILISAH AKRAY. PSYCHOLINGUISTICS. It is the relationship between the human mind and language. Psycholinguistics is concerned with how human brain organize language in mind:. the process of understanding language system.

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UNIVERSITY OF MERSİN,2010

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  1. UNIVERSITY OF MERSİN,2010 DIDEM YAPICI NILISAH AKRAY

  2. PSYCHOLINGUISTICS • It is the relationship between the human mind and language.

  3. Psycholinguistics is concerned with how human brain organize language in mind: the process of understanding language system the storing the language in human mind examining language as a product of human mind • The product is the evidence of the way in which human being organise their thoughts and impose patterns upon their experiences.

  4. SLA; It includes sociolinguistics, social psychology and educational psychology. It tends to be more eclectic in the methods they employ. PSYCHOLİNGUİSTİCS; It based on heavily a body of theory provided by cognitive psychology. It uses a limited range of established experimental techniques. SLA vs. PSYCHOLINGUISTICS

  5. COMMUNICATION Traffic lights Hand signals Facial expressions Body language Notes Smiles Wings Intention of communication=conveying a message LANGUAGE Voluntary Symbolic Systematic Two different modalities: speech and writing SPEECH • Its character is vocalisation. • Two determining factors to produce • speech-like sounds: • 1)The shape, size and position of the articulations • 2)The ability to breathe and utter sounds at the same time • Types of speech which are less meaningful than others; • Expletives • Phatic utterances

  6. NATIVIST; Human infant must have some kind of genetically transmitted language faculty in order to acquire rapidly and successfully as it does. COGNITIVIST; The differences of the operation of the brain enable us to evolve language when other species could not. In what way do our brains differ from those of other primates which do not possess language?

  7. Where is language located in the brain? Some commentators suggest that language must be an independent faculty and not part of our general powers of thought and reason. There is a difference between right side and left side of the brain in the way of contributing to language. Age also make difference in establishing the language. e.g. In infancy language ability in the brain can relocate itself on the right when necessary.

  8. The quick geography of the brain:

  9. Psycholinguistics is concerned with what we know of words and how they operate: • Word is a movable unit of meaning which cannot be broken into smaller free-standing pieces. Lexical items • Psycholinguistics studies of vocabulary and how we use it fall into three areas: • Lexical entries • Lexical storage • Lexical access

  10. Content vs. function words theBUNCHofFLOWERSthat heBOUGHTforJANE. • Content words: listener not only has to find a match in the phonological store but also has to access the meaning of the word. • Function words: a listener only needs to match the word to a phonological sequence which is stored in mind.

  11. What information do we need in order to be able to recognize and understand an item of vocabulary when we encounter in speech and writing? ALL WE NEED IS KNOWING ABOUT FORM AND MEANING. Contents of a lexical entry

  12. FORM • Phonological/Orthographic information: Phonological orthographic form form /gıv/ give MEANING Note: variation in speech and writing text, homonymy. • Morphological information: gave GIVE HAPPY unhappy (have) given

  13. MEANING • Syntax: Vocabulary and grammar are closely linked. Lexical entry needs to contain information on word class and on types of syntactic structure. e.g. GIVE something to somebody GIVE somebody something • Range of senses: Lemma contains range of meanings. e.g. I turned the corner. Turn over the page. The room turned cold.

  14. Lexical storage has two extremely important issues: • The area of meaning covered by any given word is heavily influenced by the existence of other words alongside it. e.g. happy=content, pleased or delighted • The area of meaning that we associate with a word is heavily dependent upon the way in which we categorise the world around us. e.g. English uses one verb to be, but Spanish has two (temporary being vs permanent being) and Portuguese has three.

  15. Lexical storage and lexical access: • Lexical storage: how words are stored in our minds in relation to each other. • Lexical access: how we reach a word when we need it. Storage assists access: Form and Meaning can interact in helping us to retrieve to a word that we need and how an infant or a foreign- language learner acquires their vocabulary. e.g. A listener who hears the word CARROT; • In form, the initial sounds link in to the whole set of words beginning with /kae/ • In meaning, the context might indicate that the current topic was vegetables and lead the listener to open up the set of vegetables.

  16. WEAK AND STRONG LINKS • According to connectionist: • Fish and Chips strong connection because it is used frequently • Fish and River weak connection because it is used less frequently • Spreading activation: • DOCTOR patient, hospital, medicine Note: spreading activation use priming.

  17. The basic idea is that raw data is acted upon stage by stage by mind and is progressively reshaped.

  18. Perception and pattern recognition • Sensation: the unanalysed experience of sound meeting one’s ear or light meeting one’s eye. • Perception: mental operation involved in analysing what signals contains. • The process involves; • Breaking the input into different characteristics • Matching the whole representation which is based upon previous experiences and is stored permanently in long-term memory. • Allocating an identity or a category to the sensation.

  19. SENSORY STORES (speech or writing) SHORT TERM MEMORY LONG TERM MEMORY External stimulus A visual sensory stores referred to as iconic memory. An auditory sensory stores referred to as echoic memory. Stores current information and holds temporary information for immediate purposes. It will be explained in another slide. • A three-store model of human memory

  20. Prosessing as subject to limitation • It is believed that working memory has a very limited capacity for information. This has important consequences for the way in which we process language: • Some language tasks( listening and speaking simultaneously) make impossibly heavy demands on Working Memory • Human memory is not able to retrain all the language information that is heard and read. Thus, human brain cuts the information into pieces and retrain it. • We constantly need to transfer information into Long Term Memory to avoid congestion in Working Memory

  21. PROCESSİNG AS A CONSTRUCTİVE OPERATİON Speaker/writer encodes a message listener/reader decodes the message THUS: Listening/Reading is active in the process. • Minds of listener do not only construct meaning of the language but also integrated it into what has already understood. • Listeners/reader do not simply receive a message, they also may have remake intention of the writer/speaker. • Listener/reader simply selects what they want from a piece of speech and writing.

  22. LEVEL OF REPRESENTATİON • The process of producing or understanding language involves taking linguistic information through a series of stages and changing it at each step. • BOTTOM-DOWN PROCESS: Assembling larger units from smaller ones. • It is a data-driven process: it relies upon evidence that is physically presents. • TOP-DOWN PROCESS: using higher level of information to support lower-level process. • It is a knowledge-driven process: it relies upon external information.

  23. Writing system: a method of writing such as the alphabetA script: a form of writing (Arabic script, Greek script)An orthography: the writing convention of a particular language WRİTİNG SYSTEM Alphabets syllabaries logographic system It is a symbol for İt is a symbol for It is a symbol for each phoneme of the each syllable of the each word of the language. Language language.

  24. ALPHABETIC SYSTEM IN WRITING SYSTEM • English uses alphabetic system which is easy to acquire for children as they already speak the language before they learn to write it. • Writer also can guess the spelling from the knowledge of how words are pronounced.

  25. DECODING IN READING • Lower Level Processes: It includes decoding (recognizing words in the text) and lexical entries. • Higher Level Processes:It includes applying background knowledge to the text, inferring meaning which is not explicitly stated in the text, interpreting the writer’s intention and constructing a global meaning representation of the text. They are much more conscious control if the reader, who is sometimes able to report on them.

  26. Decoding: Recognizing written forms by reference to spoken ones. a. A Sub-lexical Route The lexical route is usually the faster a lexical route because it is more READ automatic; but we need sub-lexical route /r+i:+d/ when we have to a sub-lexical route match unfamiliar words with their spoken forms.

  27. Decoding: Recognizing written forms by reference to spoken ones. b. Analogy: Readers/Writers do not simply make use of the GPC rules that link graphemes and phonemes but also rely upon between new words and those that we already know. c. Neighborhood Effect: Phonological criteria play a part not just when we have to assign pronunciation to unknown words but in the processing of known written words. e.g. READ /ri:d/ = Bead, Lead, Plead /red/ = Head, Dead, Tread

  28. INNER SPEECH • In what forms do we try to store sentences in mind? • We rehearse the sentences in something like a spoken form- an ‘inner voice’ in our head. Why spoken form is more preferable than a visual? • Spoken information in memory is more durable term than visual. • If we store words in spoken form, they are less likely to interfere with the visual process of decoding words on page.

  29. ISSUES IN LISTENING: • The linearity issue: The spoken signal does not consist of a string of phonemes but written language consists of a string of letters. • The non-invariance issue: Because of co-articulation effect, researches have studied the cues that are physically present in the speech stream, but they have failed to find any combination of features that is peculiar to one phoneme alone. • The normalisation issue: Every speaker has a distinctive voice. • The accommodation issue: A speaker has sometimes a difficult move from one articulatory setting to another. The speaker often adopts short cut and adjusts the first sound to the second. • The lexical segmentation issue: • The storage issue:

  30. MOTOR THEORY • This theory was proposed by Liberman and his colleagues at the Haskins Laboratories in the USA. • This theory suggested that we are able to interpret the sounds we hear in connected speech by relating them to the muscular movements that we make when producing them.

  31. CHARACTERISTICS OF SPEECH • John Laver in his phonetics study suggests that there are three types of speech. • In continuous fluent speech, a speaking turn of several phonological phrases is produced without pauses. • In non-continuous fluent speech, a speaking turn of several phonological phrases has pauses between the phrases but they coincide with clause boundaries. • In non-continuous hesitant speech, there are hesitation pauses which fall within phonological phrases.

  32. LONG TERM MEMORY It is intentional and even conscious learning.

  33. SCHEMA THEORY • Schema is a set of interrelated features which we associate with an entity or concept. • There are three types of schema in process of language information: • ‘Word knowledge’: including encyclopedic knowledge and previous knowledge of speaker or writer. This helps us to construct a content schema for a text. • Knowledge built up from the text so far: a current meaning representation. • Text schema: this can be extended to include; previous experience of the type of task that listener/reader has to perform.

  34. A SCHEMA FRAMEWORK & SHARED KNOWLEDGE • In content schema understanding of the text is very important for this reason topic about the text has important role in understanding of text. • In shared knowledge; scripts enables writers/speakers to adopt a kind of shorthand. • We need to make associations between sentences.

  35. EXCEPTİONAL CIRCUMSTANCES

  36. DEAFNESS • Deaf people are regarded as possessing a language in sign language. • For them, spoken and written English are effectively a late-acquired second language, mediated through Sign. • It leads to delayed acquisition- infants, they reach fifty-word threshold around ten months later then their hearing peers.

  37. BLİNDNESS ? Doesvisualimpairment lead to delays in language acquisition? • Blind infant certainly appears to acquire a phonological system a little more slowly than normal child. • Their first words emerge at about the same time as those of sighted infants. • They generally engage less in sorting activities; this suggests that blindness may limit the capacity to form categories, with consequences for vocabulary acquisition.

  38. LANGUAGE DISORDERSIt can be developmental or it can be acquired later • Problems of fluency • Psychological Problems; stuttering, malformation, malformation of the articulators (mouth, tongue, palate, etc.) • So long as hearing and intelligence are not impaired, the ability to articulate the sounds of speech does not prevent a child from developing language understanding or inner speech. • Problems of written language • Dyslexia (reading difficulty), dysgraphia ( writing problem) • Dyslexia shows up as a mismatch between low achievement in reading and an average or high level of intelligence. However, it is often accompanied by difficulty in specific cognitive areas- including spatial intelligence, temporal intelligence, mathematical operations.

  39. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN LANGUAGE AND COGNITION • No matter what their intelligence and environment are all human beings grow up to achieve full competence in their native tongue. • Studies of Down`s Syndrome suggest a connection between cognitive impairment and failure to acquire full linguistic competence. They show limitations of attention, short-term memory and perceptual discrimination. They acquire only a limited vocabulary and utterances usually remain short and telegraphic.

  40. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN LANGUAGE AND COGNITION • Autism represents a combination of cognitive and social impairment. Child may be mute until the age of five or may do little more than echo the words that adults say to them. • There is a lack of theory of mind that is the ability to see the world from the point of view of another person. • Down`s Syndrome and autism appear to demonstrate links between cognitive development and language.

  41. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN LANGUAGE AND COGNITION • Specific language impairment: a child who appears otherwise normal fails to acquire language like its peers. These children achieve a linguistic competence that is less than complete. e.g. they restrict vocabulary or make some basic grammar mistake. • They may show problems of comprehension as well as problems of production. They have difficulty in sustaining a contextual framework for conversation.

  42. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN LANGUAGE AND COGNITION • Sufferers from Williams Syndrome present signs of cognitive impairment, including low IQ, yet their language competence appears to be relatively unaffected. This happens because of the imbalances in brain structure, with a reduction of some areas but sparing of the cerebellum and frontal lobes. • A similar mystery attends savants. These are individuals who are severely mentally impaired, but show exceptional gifts, usually in relation to painting and music.

  43. MODULARITY • There are those who believe that language and cognition are interconnected and that the acquisition of language goes hand in hand with the development of cognition. • There are others who believe that language is modular (a separate faculty)

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