Language: Form And Function Flashcards

(32 cards)

1
Q

What are some examples of animals engaging in communication?

A

Territorial markings of dogs
Caste pheromone signals in ants (olfactory)
Mating calls and displays of birds and frogs
Warning calls of monkeys

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2
Q

How do bees communicate?

A

Communicate through a wagging dance- dancing to indicate the direction of their food. The angle of the dance shows the angle of the sun to go to the food, and the speed of waggles imply the distance to the food. This is done after a bee has found food already

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3
Q

Provide a study that tests bee communication.

A

Experimenters take out a feeder and bees would go and then do their dance. Take some bees outside of the hive vs inside the hive, and they would go the same distance, implying that they understood the supposed distance between them and the supposed hive

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4
Q

How do vervet monkeys communicate when they are in danger?

A

Different predators mean different alarm calls which thus signal different behavior. Three distinct calls for birds of prey (would go in bushes) leopards (hide in trees) and snakes (go on toes and look)

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5
Q

What are the similarities between animal communication and human communication?

A

Capable of sharing specific information and usage of symbolic sounds and gestures

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6
Q

How is human language different from animal communication?

A

We can make many more speech sounds and refer to more objects, animals are limited to survival and reproduction needs. Combination of symbols can be combined into grammar

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7
Q

Describe the structure of human speech

A

Discourse
Sentences
Phrases
Words
Morphemes
Phoenemes

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8
Q

Conversation with back and fourth turn taking

A

Discourse

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9
Q

Unit of language that conveys meaning

A

Morphemes

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10
Q

Provide an example of a morpheme

A

The “re” in redo is not a word, but we understand that it means to repeat again

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11
Q

Speech sounds

A

Phonemes

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12
Q

Provide an example of the three functional units of languages

A

Conceptual intentional interface (what is being attempted to be communicated)
Syntactic rules and representations (innate sense of how we put words together)
External sensory motor interface (what speech sounds can we physically make)

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13
Q

Assumptions we make when conveying or interpreting the meaning of actual speech, as well as the interpretation of signs and gestures

A

Pragmatics

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14
Q

Describe bottom-up processing in language

A

Words that are being spoken

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15
Q

Provide an example of top-down communication in language

A

Expectation of what should be communicated

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16
Q

Expectations of cooperative communication flow

17
Q

What are the four maxims?

A

Quantity: quantity should match the amount of information
Quality: information should be true
Relation: statement should be relevant to the context
Manner: statement should be clear

18
Q

When is the quantity maxim violated”?

A

Joking- specifically where you give less information than what is necessary

19
Q

When are quality maxims violated?

A

Irony and sarcasm
Metaphors
Information is not technically true

20
Q

How can manner maxim be violated?

A

Being intentionally unclear in an indirect request: “do you know what time is it?” Expect to be answered with the current time

21
Q

Describe the speech act theory

A

We derive a literal meaning of an utterance , we assess the interpretability of that meaning against the context, then if it does not make sense we derive an alternative non-literal meaning

22
Q

What are the primary issues of speech act theory?

A

Metaphors can be literally true and still perceived with metaphorical meaning
Metaphorical meanings are derived automatically, it takes longer to get the literal meaning
Metaphoric meanings are as easily primed as literal meanings

23
Q

Provide an example of metaphors of literal truth

A

When you say “no man is an island”, it is factually true that no man is an island but the definition of the statement is typically that one is not alone. Metaphorical meaning is inferred

24
Q

Describe a study that talks about the process of automatically processing metaphors

A

Measured the speed of participants and how long it took for them to verify a statement as literally true or literally false. Discoverers that it took a longer time to verify that metaphors are literally false in comparison to literal falsehoods and scrambled metaphors, implying we automatically process the metaphor as true then move to its literal meaning

25
Describe priming in metaphors in a study
Had participants read literal or metaphorical statements about a category, such as the large hammerhead is a shark and the defense lawyer is a shark. Participants were then asked to verify a literal or metaphoric property: such as sharks are good swimmers (literal) and sharks are tenacious (metaphoric). It was found that participants who read literal statements were faster at verifying literal statements and vice versa
26
Discuss the modern theory of metaphors
Argues that metaphors are a special kind of class inclusion statement that could more easily represent a unique category. The label “jail” can be used for certain situations to convey different properties
27
What is the question of Orvell et al? 1st
Is “you” used for normative statements?
28
What are the alternatives for Orvell et al?
Yes, you statements often convey broad generalizations similar to generic noun phrases (such as dogs can bark) No, you is a context dependent pronoun typically used to identify an individual (are you free?)
29
What is the logic of Orvell et al?
If “you” statements are truly normative, then people should use “you” rather than “I” to describe actions that apply broadly
30
What was the method of ORvell et al?
People answered questions about everyday objects taht referred to either norms or preferences. experiment 1: what should you do with a hammer (norm) or what do you like to do with a hammer? (Preference) experiment 2: what do you do with a hammer (norm) + preference condition Experiment 3: How do use a hammer? Consider what should or not should be done what do you like/consider likes to dislikes
31
What were the results of Orvell et al?
You is used more for norms while I is used more for preference statements
32
What are the inferences of Orvell et al?
The generic you is used to express norms without much explicit prompting You is a context bound pronoun that has been co-opted to express context free ideas, perhaps because you is not I The use of you turns self relevant experiences into a shared universal experience