Ch 8 Language Acquistion Module 8 Flashcards

1
Q

innate

A

determined by factors present from birth

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2
Q

innateness hypothesis

A

a hypothesis that humans are generally predisposed to learn and use language

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3
Q

Imitation theory

A

child language acquisitions theory that claims that children acquire language by listening to the speech around them

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4
Q

Reinforcement Theory

A

theory of child language acquisition which says that children learn to speak like adults because they are praised, rewarded or otherwise reinforced.

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5
Q

Active Constructions of a Grammar Theory

A

theory of child language which says that children acquire a language by inventing rules of grammar based on the speech around them.

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6
Q

Connectionist Theory

A

theory of language acquisitions which claims that children learn language through neural connections in the brain.

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7
Q

linguistic universals

A

property believed to be held in common by all natural languages

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8
Q

universal grammar

A

the theory that posits a set of grammatical characteristics shared by all natural languages.

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9
Q

critical period

A

age span, usually described as lasting from birth to the onset of puberty, during which children must have exposure to language and must build the critical brain structures necessary in order to gain native speaker competence

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10
Q

neglected children

A

a child who is neglected by caretakers, often resulting in significantly lower exposure to language

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11
Q

feral children

A

child who grew up in the wild without care by a human adult, often with animals.

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12
Q

Homesign

A

a rudimentary, visual gestural communication system that is developed and used by deaf children and their families when signed language is not made available.

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13
Q

rules

A

a formal statement of an observed generalization about patterns in language

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14
Q

Social Interaction Theory

A

theory of language acquisition that claims that children acquire language through social interaction

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15
Q

High Amplitude Sucking

A

experiment technique used to study sound discrimination in infants from birth to about six months

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16
Q

Conditioned Head-Turn Procedure

A

experimental technique usually used with infants between five and eighteen months with two phases: conditioning and testing

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17
Q

voice onset time

A

the length of time between the release of a consonant and the onset of voicing, that is, when the vocal folds start vibrating

18
Q

articulatory gestures

A

a movement of a speech organ in the production of speech.

19
Q

babble

A

a phase in child language acquisition during which the child produces meaningless sequences of consonants and vowels

20
Q

canonical babbling

A

the continuous repetition of sequences of vowels and consonants like mamama by infants

21
Q

variegated babbling

A

production of meaningless consonant-vowel sequences by infants

22
Q

holophrastic stage

A

stage in first language acquisition during which children can produce only one word at a time.

23
Q

telegraphic stage

A

a phase during child language acquisition on which children use utterances composed primarily of content words

24
Q

overgeneralization

A

in the study of child language acquisition, a relationship between child and adult application of rules relative to certain contexts

25
Q

complexive concept

A

a term used in the study of child language acquisition, a group of times that a child refers to with a single word for which it is not possible to single out any one unifying property

26
Q

overextension

A

a relationship between child and adult perception of word meaning. a childs application of a word as a larger meaning than the adult .

27
Q

underextension

A

application of a word to a smaller set of objects than is appropriate for mature adult speech

28
Q

relational term

A

type of relationship between adjective and noun reference where the reference of the adjective is determined relative to the noun reference

29
Q

deictic expressions

A

word or expression that takes its meaning relative to the time, place and speaker of the utterance

30
Q

infant directed speech

A

speech used by parents or caregivers when communicating with young children or infants

31
Q

attention getters

A

word or phrase used to initiate an address to children

32
Q

attention holders

A

a tactic used to maintain childrens attention for extended amounts of time

33
Q

conversational turns

A

the contribution to a conversation by one speaker from that time that she takes the floor from another speaker to the time that she passes the floor on the another speaker

34
Q

bilingual

A

state of commanding two language

35
Q

multilingual

A

the state of commanding three or more languages

36
Q

simultaneious bilingualism

A

in which both languages are acquired form infancy

37
Q

sequential bilingualism

A

in which the second language is acquired as a young child

38
Q

second language acquisition

A

acquisition of a second language as a teenager or adult

39
Q

language mixing

A

using words or structural elements form more than on language with the same conversation.

40
Q

foreign accent

A

an accent that is marked by the phonology of another language or other languages.

41
Q

fossilization

A

process through which forms from a speakers non native language usage become fixed and do not change