Chapter 9-Language and Thought Flashcards

Language and Thought

1
Q

language

A

system for communicating with others using signals that are combined according to rules of grammar and convey meaning

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2
Q

grammar

A

a set of rules that specify how the units of language can be combined to produce meaningful messages

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3
Q

phoneme

A

smallest unit of sound that is recognizable as speech rather than random noise

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4
Q

phonological rules

A

a set of rules that indicate how phonemes can be combined to produce speech sounds

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5
Q

morphemes

A

smallest meaningful units of language

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6
Q

morphological rules

A

a set of rules that indicate how morphemes can be combined to form words

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7
Q

syntactical rules

A

a set of rules that indicate how words can be combined to form phrases and sentences

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8
Q

deep structure

A

meaning of a sentence

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9
Q

surface structure

A

how a sentence is worded

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10
Q

fast mapping

A

the fact that children can map a word onto an underlying concept after only a single exposure

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11
Q

telegraphic speech

A

speech that is devoid of function morphemes and consists more of content words

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12
Q

nativist theory

A

view that language development is best explained as an innate biological capacity

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13
Q

language acquisition device (LAD)

A

collection of processes that facilitate language learning

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14
Q

genetic dysphasia

A

a syndrom characterized by an inability to learn the grammatical structure of language despite having otherwise normal intelligence

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15
Q

aphasia

A

difficulty in producing or comprehending language

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16
Q

linguistic relativity hypothesis

A

proposal that language shapes the nature of thought

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17
Q

concept

A

a mental representation that groups or categorizes shared features of related objects, events, or other stimuli

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18
Q

significance of Broca’s area

A

language production

19
Q

significance of Wernicke’s area

A

comprehension

20
Q

Broca’s aphasia

A

trouble producing full sentences, speak in short phrases

21
Q

Wernicke’s aphasia

A

trouble producing meaningful sentences, speak in full sentences that are meaningless

22
Q

family resemblance theory

A

members of the category have features that appear to be characteristic of category members but may not be possessed by every member

23
Q

prototype

A

the best or more typical member of the category

24
Q

exemplar theory

A

theory of categorization that argues that we make category judgements by comparing a new instance with stored memories for other instances of the category

25
Q

category specific deficit

A

a neurological syndrome that is characterized by an inability to recognize objects that belong to particular category though the ability to recognize objects outside the category is undisturbed

26
Q

rational choice theory

A

classical view that we make decisions by determining how likely something is to happen judging the value of the outcome and then multiplying the two

27
Q

availability bias

A

items that are more readily available in memory or judged as having occurred more frequently

28
Q

heuristic

A

a fast and efficient strategy that may facilitate decision making but does not guarantee that a solution will be reached

29
Q

algorithm

A

a well defined sequence of procedures or rules that guarantees a solution to a problem

30
Q

conjunction fallacy

A

when people think that two events are more likely to occur together than either individual

31
Q

representativeness heuristic

A

a mental shortcut that involves making a probability judgement by comparing an object or event to a prototype of the object or event

32
Q

framing effect

A

when people give different answers to the same problem depending on how the problem is phrased or framed

33
Q

sunk cost fallacy

A

a framing effect in which people make decisions about a current situation based on what they have previously invested in the situation

34
Q

prospect theory

A

the proposal that people choose to take on risk when evaluating potential losses and avoid risks when evaluation potential gains

35
Q

frequency format hypothesis

A

the proposal that our minds evolve to notice how frequent things occur not how likely they are to occur

36
Q

prefrontal cortex function and significance

A

decision-making, damage to this part of the brain may cause risky decisions

37
Q

means-ends analysis

A

a process of searching for the means or steps to reduce differences between the current situation and the desired goal

38
Q

analogical problem solving

A

solving a problem by finding a similar problem with a known solution and applying that solution to the current problem

39
Q

functional fixedness

A

the tendency to perceive the functions of objects as fixed

40
Q

reasoning

A

a mental activity that consists of organizing information or beliefs into a series of steps to reach conclusions

41
Q

practical reasoning

A

figuring out what to do or reasoning direction toward an action

42
Q

theoretical reasoning

A

reasoning directed toward arriving at a belief

43
Q

belief bias

A

people’s judgements about whether to accept conclusions depend more on how believable the conclusions are than on whether the arguments are logically valid

44
Q

syllogistic reasoning

A

determining whether conclusion follows from two statements that are assumed to be true