language acquisition (topic 4) Flashcards

1
Q

how do newborns perform on sound distinction and how does this change during the first year of their life?

A

young infants recognize all sound distinctions, whether native or non-native. around 8-10 months, they start to lose the sensitivities to non-native distinctions, and by 11-12 months, they are exclusively sensitive to the distinctions of their native language.

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2
Q

what are the three stages in initial speech production of infants? what changes during the second stage?

A
  • 2-6 months: cooing = nasal sounds with sometimes palatal/velar closure; no syllables recognizable.
  • 6-12 months: babbling = repetition of syllable-like patterns (CV). at 6 months there is no difference depending on native language, but around 10 months babbling starts to reflect the language they are exposed to.
  • from 12 months, 1-3 years: first word production.
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3
Q

what are four ways that early word production phonetically differs from their adult targets? and what can one say about the prosody of this early word production?

A
  • cluster reduction
  • coda deletion
  • consonant harmony (assimilation)
  • omission of weak syllables

infants babble the most frequent prosodic structure of words in the target language (syllables, stress placement)

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4
Q

what is the development of early perceptual syntactic development (4 stages)?

A
  • from 2 months: remembering word order, if heard in coherent sentence intonation
  • 4,5 months: responding to well-formed vs. ill-formed phrasal boundaries across languages
  • by 6 months they only respond to differences in their native language; they have learned to recognize the correct prosodic flow in their native language
  • 7 months: generalize underlying patterns: recognizing ABA vs. ABB syllable sequencing
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5
Q

what are the three stages in early syntactic production?

A
  • 10-11 months: one-word utterances
  • 14 months: two-word utterances
  • 16-17: phrases and sentences
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6
Q

what is telegraphic speech?

A

infants producing speech that, compared to adult grammar, misses functional elements (wrong case, missing inflection, etc.). this doesn’t happen in all languages.

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7
Q

what can you say about word order and language development?

A

early production rarely violates basic word order of target language. by 18 months, infants can interpret word order differences leading to meaning differences (subject, object).

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8
Q

what is the rationalist model of acquisition and what are its characteristics (3)?

A

a model according to which children have innate knowledge (UG) they use in acquisition

  • continuity: no qualitative difference between child languages and adult language
  • hard-wiring / innateness
  • domain-specifity
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9
Q

what is the argument behind UG?

A

it seems impossible for children to learn language if they don’t have any present innate knowledge, especially because they don’t get any negative evidence (direct information about what is ill-formed)

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10
Q

what is the content of UG? and how does learning work with this?

A

principles: universal principles (e.g. structure dependence, X-bar template)
parameters: principled, limited parameters of variation (e.g. null subject, head direction)
clustering of characteristics means that they only have to see one instance of a parameter –> knowing about all the other rules related to it as well

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11
Q

what is a criticism to UG?

A

structure dependence could also be learnt from hearing relevant examples; innateness not absolutely necessary

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12
Q

what is optimality theory? by what is the learning space constrained in OT?

A

child and adult grammar consist of same, innate constraints (e.g. markedness, faithfulness). initially they are ordered markedness&raquo_space; faithfulness, but in learning they get reordered.

asymmetry in markedness.

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13
Q

what is the empiricist perspective to language acquisition? what are its characteristics (3)?

A

there is no a priori structurally-defined learning space, but there are some non-linguistic biases (outside of grammar).

  • emergentism: principles emerge through abstraction over acquisition; child language is-not adult language.
  • experience-dependency
  • domain-generality
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14
Q

what are the three stages of the item-based model of syntax acquisition?

A
  • grammarless holophrases
  • schemas
  • constructions
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15
Q

what are some arguments for the item-based acquisition of syntax?

A
  • det+noun tends to be analysed as chunks

- little productivity

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16
Q

how can children learn without any principles being innate and without negative evidence? (3 things)

A
  • entrenchment: repeated input makes other uses sound unconventional
  • pre-epmtion: alternative forms block extension
  • functional analysis (e.g. semantic hints)
17
Q

what is a challenge for the items-and-analogy learning analysis?

A

there are many surface level patterns that we would expect to find in child’s language, but we don’t

18
Q

what is the whole-word model of phonological acquisition? what are its stages?

A

you learn the shape of words and then abstract templates from that

  • vocal motor scheme
  • templates
  • more specific templates
19
Q

what is a challenge to the whole-word model of phonological acquisition?

A

it does not explain how we learn non-lexical phonology (intonation, stress, etc.)

20
Q

what are some non-linguistic biases that constraint our language, in the empiricist view?

A
  • perceptuo-motor factors –> CV is easy to hear/produce

- processing factors –> doer before doee –> S before O