Week 1 Flashcards

1
Q

What is the Whorf–Sapir linguistic relativity hypothesis?

A

a principle suggesting that the structure of a language affects its speakers’ worldview or cognition, and thus people’s perceptions are relative to their spoken language

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2
Q

What did Sapir believe humans are at the mercy of?

A

the particular language which has become their medium of expression

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3
Q

What two factors did Whorf believe interact with each other constantly?

A

language and culture

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4
Q

Why did the Sapir-Whorfian position on language diminish in academic favour?

A
  1. due to the emergence of the universalist position of Chomskian linguistics
  2. due to controversies elicited by a series of experimental studies during the 1960s and 1970s, documenting the independence of hue and brightness perception from linguistic color-naming
    practices
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5
Q

What did Li and Gleitman (2002) invastigate in their paper?

A

whether linguistic differences in spatial mapping onto language impacts the ways that members of a linguistic community conceptualise the nonlinguistic world

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6
Q

what are deictic or “relative” egocentric descriptors?

A

spatial expressions referring to directions and locations relatively

e.g., the tree to the left of the mountain

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7
Q

What are externally referenced or “absolute” allocentric descriptors?

A

spatial expressions referring to directions and locations externally to the viewer

e.g., the tree to the North of the mountain

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8
Q

What are subtypes of allocentric descriptors?

A
  1. refering to the intrinsic properties of external objects
  2. refering to local or global landmarks and regions
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9
Q

What does Whorf mean by “fashions of speaking” and what is their importance?

A

They are the preferred ways of analysing and reporting experience which have become fixed in the language.
Languages that share semantic and structural resources often still differ in these fashions, which might affect the speaker’s everyday modes of thought

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10
Q

What is the PDWLKS man and tree test?

A

The Director and Matcher sit side by side facing the same direction. In front of each person is a set of 14 identical photographs, arrayed differently. Eight pictures show a toy girl in some position relative to a toy umbrella. The remaining pictures (distractors) are of scenes in which spatial relations between objects are not the crucial contrasting factor. A screen divides Director and Matcher. The Director chooses a photograph and describes it for the Matcher to find, e.g. “the girl with her back to the umbrella”. The spatial language used is analysed.

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11
Q

Do English and Dutch speakers primarily use relative egocentric, or absolute allocentric descriptors?

A

relative egocentric descriptors

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12
Q

in landmark-poor conditions, speakers of a language community that favours ____ terminology overwhelmingly chose the ____ solution of the tabletop spatial task

A

relative/egocentric, body-centred

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13
Q

in landmark-rich contexts, there is a ____ of scores, where the distribution of absolute and relative descriptors is ____ among speakers

A

U-shaped distribution, split

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14
Q

do visible landmarks make people more or less aware of the availability of two possible spatial frameworks?

A

more - the presence of landmark cues weakens bias toward egocentric responses

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15
Q

What do Li and Gleitman (2002) conclude about the selection of relative or absolute linguistic strategies?

A

that the choice may be a function of the cues made consistently available in the environment, rather than a result of culture or linguistically learned nature

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16
Q

Why do Li and Gleitman (2002) review literature of spatial reasoning in laboratory animals and prelinguistic human infants?

A

because they are non-linguistic and pre-linguistic populations - this review controls for the effects of language

17
Q

What influences how nonlinguistic populations including rodents and human infants solve spatial rotation problems?

A

the availability and salience of
landmark cues

18
Q

Which are the 3 possible explanations behind communities using absolute terminology, and which is the most supported by Whorfian thinking?

A
  1. people are less schooled
  2. communities are more insular (isolated from other groups) and geographically cohesive than egocentrically-biased communities
  3. their elicited spatial terminology in the man-and-tree test is “absolute”

The Whorfian bet is that the third factor, linguistic
divergence, holds the explanatory key to reasoning strategies