Thought & Language Flashcards

1
Q

What is the hierarchal nature of language?

A

Phonemes –> Morphemes –> Words –> Phrase –> Sentence

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2
Q

What are phonemes?

A

They are single units of sounds that changes meaning. (dog –> log)

Typically 40 in English. Not all languages have the same phonemes.

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3
Q

What are morphemes?

A

Smallest language units that carry meaning.

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4
Q

Explain the difference between bound and unbound morphemes.

A

Unbound morphemes can contain function and content words, whilst bound morphemes are function suffixes and affixes.

Bound morphemes serve a functional role, prescribing possession (-‘s in Charlie’s, superlatives (-est in best), comparison (-er in better), plurality (-s in cans)

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5
Q

What is the difference between semantic and syntactic processing?

A

Semantic processing relies on content words, which map onto concepts, which are units of semantic memory, creating categories.

Syntactic processing relies on function words. (pronouns, conjunctives, prepositions)

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6
Q

What is the main difference witnessed between Wernicke’s and Broca’s aphasic patients?

A

Those with Wernicke’s aphasia can speak fluently, but fail in comprehension. Those with Broca’s aphasia struggle with function words, and has laboured speech, but is capable of comprehension.

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7
Q

Explain surface vs deep structure.

A

Surface structure focuses on the word order / organisation of a sentence; the syntax. Meanwhile, deep structure focuses on meaning of the sentence.

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8
Q

What do you call a sentence organised the same way, but have multiple meanings?

A

Ambiguous meaning, singular surface structure with multiple deep structures.

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9
Q

What kinds of sounds can newborns perceive?

A

Many basic phoneme contrasts (diff between sounds) across different languages. They prefer organic speech over artificial sounds.

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10
Q

When do children’s perceptions of consonant sounds become categorical?

A

At 9 months. Detection of phonemic change is modified by experience.

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11
Q

What are the 3 types of sounds children make?

A

Cooing at 2 months, reduplicated babbling at 6 - 7 months (same syllable), variegated babbling (11 - 12 months, syllables w diff consonants & vowels).

At 10 months, babies’ sounds adapt to languages they hear.

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12
Q

Why can infants only make a limited set of sounds?

A

Underdeveloped motor cortex + shape of infant vocal tract

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13
Q

What are protowords?

A

Combination of syllables in replacement of actual words.

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14
Q

Compare the rate of comprehending (receptive vocab) and producing (productive vocab) words.

A

Comprehension precedes production by an average of 4 months.

Initial acquisition rate of comprehension is twice of production.

Even phoneme production lags behind comprehension.

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15
Q

When do we witness the Vocabulary Burst, and why?

A

After the first 50 words, there is major increase in productive vocab. There is easier retrieval (developed memory systems), understanding of the symbolic nature of language and control over articulation due to improved motor abilities.

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16
Q

What does it mean when children overextend or underextend the meaning of words?

A

Under-extension: using the word “dog” to only refer to their dog, not other dogs

Over-extension: using the word “dog” to refer to cats too, “milk” for a puddle or white blankie

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17
Q

As children acquire more words, they over-extend the meaning of words less. True or false?

A

True. They mostly over-extend due to lack of words readily available, hence resorting to closest substitutions.

18
Q

What are holophrases?

A

A singular word representing an entire statement. (saying “water” to warn you about a puddle, or that it’s gonna rain, or they want water)

19
Q

By 4 years, children’s syntax resembles that of adults’. True or false?

A

True.

20
Q

When do children begin to combine words?

A

At 2 years. They have specific meaning relations they like to convey.

21
Q

What are the 3 theories of how children acquire language?

A

Nativism, general learning capacities and social learning.

22
Q

What is the nativist view of language?

A

Founded by Noam Chomsky: children acquired language effortlessly and rapidly without teaching.

23
Q

What is the language bioprogram hypothesis?

A

It is the idea that creole languages share fundamental similarities with children’s, through pidgin language (natural simplified mingling of languages into one) that develops into creoles (more complex grammar).

24
Q

Is there a sensitive period for language, and how can this be demonstrated?

A

Yes. The period ends by puberty once lateralisation occurs, imposing maturational constraints. (harder to learn afterwards)

Demonstrated through:
deaf signers - those exposed to sign earlier had greater accuracy

isolated children - Genie: diff rates of progress for acquiring words vs syntax

25
Q

What is the theory behind general learning capacities?

A

Children have highly developed pattern recognition systems:

  • statistical learning forms language categories & word boundaries by picking up on regularities without resorting to innate language categories.
26
Q

What is social learning and how much of a role do play in language learning?

A

Social learning: idea that children learn language from social interactions with parents, whose responses matter. Children’s vocab are strongly associated with amount of language parents use with children.

Manifests in parentese, social cultures and how talk is centred.

27
Q

What is parentese?

A

It is when parents simplify speech, use exaggerated intonation and gestures to interact with children.

28
Q

What is the difference between child-centred and situation-centred talk?

A

Child-centred talk involves parents adapting talk to the child’s level, and situation-centred talk involves the child adapting to the situation.

29
Q

What is the concept of representation?

A

Knowledge of the world forming the content of our thoughts.W

30
Q

What are the 2 types of representation?

A

Analogical: usually through mental imagery that originates inside brain, rather than external sensory input. Bears many similarities to what it is actually representing.

Symbolic: usually through propositional statements that don’t resemble what they stand for

31
Q

What are propositions?

A

They assert qualities about a certain subject, and expresses ideas and relationships between concepts, giving us an idea of what to expect from a member of certain categories.

32
Q

What are the 2 forms of reasoning?

A

Deductive: General principles –> specific instances, validity of conclusions follow from premises (syllogisms: if something is true for all members of a category, and A is part of that category, then it is true for A)

Inductive: usually testing hypotheses; reasoning based from specific experiences (seeing the sun rises every morning –> conclude that it rises every morning)

33
Q

What can impede our logical reasoning?

A

Belief biases, confirmation biases, social biases and availability heuristic.

34
Q

Explain the difference between belief and confirmation biases.

A

Belief bias reasons on the basis of plausibility rather than following the actual logic. Confirmation bias reasons based on beliefs we already helm, causing us to seek out information that would confirm rather than falsify our hypotheses.

35
Q

What are heuristics?

A

They are general rules of thumb commonly used to solve problems, faster and less demanding than applying careful reasoning. (save time, efficient, usually work)

36
Q

What is availability heuristic?

A

Used to judge the frequency of something happening, it is based on the saliency bias. If something is easier to retrieve, it is seen as more frequent.

37
Q

What is the Whorfian hypothesis?

A

It is the idea that our different languages affect how we think and problem solve. (colours, time, and culture)

38
Q

What did Samuel Morton believe about intelligence?

A

Head size determined intelligence. Bigger = smarter, ranked races

39
Q

Paul Broca believed that the weight of the brains determined intelligence. True or false?

A

True. The heavier, the smarter. Had gender biases.

40
Q
A