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Final Exam

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Language seems to be a uniquely human ability, suggesting an ... in the rhythm and melody of music and they can match melodies even if the key (pitch) changes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Final Exam


1
Final Exam
  • Thursday
  • April 15
  • 830-1130
  • CSE - B

2
Language Development
  • Language seems to be a uniquely human ability,
    suggesting an evolutionary foundation
  • Arguments against a purely genetic explanation
  • Productivity of novel phrases and statements
  • Variety of languages and grammatical structures

3
Language Development
4
Auditory Processes
  • Like with vision and contrast sensitivity
  • Newborns hear sounds better at low frequencies
  • By 6 months, higher frequency sensitivity is as
    good as adults
  • Overall sensitivity increases until 10 years, but
    higher frequency sensitivity does not improve
    after 4 or 5 years

5
Auditory Processes
  • In fact, around 6 months can discriminate tones
    that differ only by 2 in frequency
  • Even more complex sounds than simple tones, young
    infants can discriminate
  • 6 months discriminate changes in the rhythm and
    melody of music and they can match melodies even
    if the key (pitch) changes
  • Means that they can perceive the relations among
    the frequencies
  • And they can tell the difference between a
    lullaby and an adult-directed song

6
Auditory Localization
  • This is important for eventually matching sounds
    to people and objects
  • Even newborns will turn their heads to the left
    or right toward the source of a sound
  • Human voices are particularly effective
  • Requires detection of the time difference between
    sound reaching the two ears
  • This a particular problem in development because
    head is constantly growing

7
Preverbal Infancy
  • Language acquisition works through the perception
    of speech and its sounds
  • Must learn to parse the stream of sound into
    phonemes, syllables, words, and phrases.
  • Phoneme - is the smallest unit of sound that when
    changed, changes meaning

8
Categorical Perception
  • Infants can discriminate when two sounds are the
    same or different phonemic category
  • Phonemes are distinguished by their voice-onset
    time between lip opening and voicing by vocal
    cords

9
Categorical Perception
  • Eimas, Siqueland, Jusczyk Vigorito (1971) - 1-
    and 4-mo-olds perception of the distinction
    between /b/ and /p/
  • Adults - VOT of less than 25 msec, perceive /b/

10
Categorical Perception
  • Eimas, Siqueland, Jusczyk Vigorito (1971) -
    familiarized infants to 20 msec VOT (/b/) and
    tested them with either 40 msec (/p/), 20, or 0
    (/b/)

11
Categorical Perception
  • Eimas, Siqueland, Jusczyk Vigorito (1971) -
    familiarized infants to 20 msec VOT (/b/) and
    tested them with either 40 msec (/p/), 20, or 0
    (/b/)

12
Categorical Perception
  • Eimas, Siqueland, Jusczyk Vigorito (1971) -
    familiarized infants to 20 msec VOT (/b/) and
    tested them with either 40 msec (/p/), 20, or 0
    (/b/)

13
Phonemic Discrimination
  • In the Japanese language, adults have trouble
    pronouncing and even discriminating between /r/
    and /l/
  • They are not used in their language
  • Young Japanese infants can discriminate between
    these sounds
  • At some point they lose this ability (6-12 mos.)
  • Indicates that if you do not use it or have
    exposure to it, you lose it

14
Discriminating 2 Hindi syllables
15
Universal Phonetic Sensitivity
16
Early Baby Sounds
  • 2 months - Cooing
  • One syllable sounds, like ah and oo
  • Associated with positive emotions
  • 6 months - Reduplicated Babbling
  • Strings several instances of same sound together,
    like bababa
  • This babbling is similar across different
    cultures and languages

17
Early Baby Sounds
  • End of First Year
  • Stop duplicating and begin to string different
    sounds together
  • Include changing intonation and pitch
  • These sounds and strings are very similar to
    their first words
  • Even deaf infants display babbling
  • Suggesting a biological mechanism
  • But, they are delayed in duplicating and
    production of proper syllables

18
Nonverbal Language
  • Gestures first seem to be use around 8-10 months
  • Used to indicate requests, for example, wanting a
    toy
  • Might be related to physical development
  • Around 11-12 months, gesture start to be used for
    referential communication
  • To indicate items or events in environment
  • Example, holding up a toy to show it

19
Nonverbal Language
  • Gestures are used to symbolize objects
  • For example, talking on a phone
  • Used to indicate attributes of object or events
  • For example, this is big
  • End of first year, get combination of gestures
    and vocalizations
  • Then, gestures start to fall out and get
    transition to their first words.

20
First Words
  • Sounds and sound combinations get attached to
    particular objects with greater frequency
  • These sounds do not correspond to words we use
  • These sounds get shaped gradually and
    continuously to correspond more closely to our
    words

21
First Words
  • When they first appear shows considerable
    variability, from 9 months to 16 months
  • First words are typically of items that are
    familiar and important in their day-to-day lives
  • They appear to occur in particular contexts
  • Bates (1979) and Barrett et al. (1986)
  • no when rejecting an object
  • bye when putting down a telephone
  • papa when the doorbell rings

22
First Words
  • Eventually, these first words become
    decontextualized
  • A shift from using a word in only one particular
    situation to using the word when its reference
    occurs in a different situation
  • Requires that infants distinguish between the
    reference of a word and the context in which
    occurs

23
First Words
  • For example, catch
  • Initially used in the context of throwing an
    object to someone else
  • Decontextualized use when someone throws to
    someone else, to request someone to throw an
    object, etc.

24
Lexical Development
  • Once child begins to talk, its vocabulary and
    usage expands dramatically and quickly
  • Acquiring words is easier than attributing them
    with the right meaning

25
Lexical Development
  • By 18 months, infant typically has on average 50
    words it can produce and 100 words it can
    understand

26
Lexical Development
  • Answering Questions
  • Whats That?
  • Whos That?
  • Asking Questions
  • What? (what is that)
  • Where?
  • Comments
  • Gone (empty cup)
  • Hot (pot on stove)
  • Cut (band-aid on daddy)

27
Lexical Development
  • Errors in first words usage
  • Overextensions
  • Using Daddy for every male
  • More common in production than comprehension
  • Underextensions
  • Using Duck for a toy duck but not a real one

28
First Word Combinations
  • Occurs around age 2
  • Tend to leave out fillers
  • Mommy apron
  • Types of combination seem to be common across
    languages

29
First Word Combinations
  • Combination Rules
  • Pivotal rules -- pivot words are combined with
    names of objects, actions, or attributes
  • Allgone Juice
  • More Milk
  • Categorical Rules -- names from category (agents,
    actions, etc.) with names from another category
    (objects, locations, etc.)
  • Mommy Sock
  • Book Table

30
Grammar Development
  • Even the two word sentences follow certain rules
  • For example, one word may always be first as the
    second word changes
  • Even as sentences grow to three and four words,
    they can be characterized as telegraphic speech
  • They leave out fillers (a, the, and)
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