Unit 7B: Thinking, Problem Solving , Creativity, and Language
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Transcript Unit 7B: Thinking, Problem Solving , Creativity, and Language
Language
Language
Our spoken, written , or signed words and
the ways we combine them as we think
and communicate
Human essence: the qualities of the mind
are unique to humans
Allows us to transmit civilizations
accumulated knowledge across
generations
Kevin Office Clip:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OFiHaMdP
PZE
Language Structure
Phonemes
Morphemes
Grammar
Phonemes
A set of basic sounds
Within a language, changes in
phonemes produce changes in meaning
B and T (ex): bat, bet, bit, bite, etc
People who grow up learning one sett of
phonemes usually have difficulty
pronouncing those of another language
Native English speaker & German
Morphemes
The smallest unit of language that
carries meaning
Grammar
A system of rules in a given language
that enables us to communicate and
understand one another
Semantics: set of rules we use to derive
meaning from morphemes, words, and
even sentences
Syntax: order words into sentences
When do we learn language?
Receptive Language (the ability to comprehend
speech)
By 4 months of age babies can discriminate speech
sounds
(Even before 4 months, cooing occurs at around 3
to 5 weeks of age-repeat basic vowel sounds
without consonants)
When do we learn language?
Productive Language
Around 4 months babies enter the babbling
stage
○ Utter a variety of sounds, includes sounds various
languages
○ Video clip: conversational babbling
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_JmA2ClUvUY
By 10 months their babbling has changed so
that a trained ear can identify the language of
the household
○ Without exposure to other languages, babies
become deaf to speech sounds outside their
native language
Productive language
Around 12 months children enter the oneword stage
At About 18 months, children’s word
learning explodes from a word per week to
a word per day
At about 24 months, enter a two-word
stage
Utter two-word sentences in telegraphic speech
(want juice)
After 24 months children begin uttering
longer phrases and begin to understand
complex sentences
Explaining Language
Development
Skinner: operate learning
Can explain language development with
familiar learning principles such as
association, imitation, and reinforcement
Skinner argued babies learn to talk in many
of the same ways that animals learn to peck
keys and press bars (nature-evolution)
Explaining Language
Development
Chomsky: Inborn Universal Grammar
Given adequate nurture, language will naturally
occur
We come prewired with a sort of switch box
(language acquisition device). It switches on and off
for us to understand and produce language
Explaining Language
Development: Nature vs. Nurture
Debate
Skinner’s emphasis on learning helps
explain how infants acquire their
language as they interact with others
Chomsky’s emphasis on our built-in
readiness to learn grammar rules helps
explain why preschoolers acquire
language so readily and use grammar
so well
Biology and experience working
together
Statistical Learning and Critical
Periods
Childhood seems to represent a critical (or
sensitive) period for mastering certain aspects
of language
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G2XBIkHW954
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WXWGnryjEaY
Children who have not been exposed to either
a spoken or written language gradually lose
the ability to master any language
After the window for learning language closes,
learning a second language seems more
difficult
May master the basic words but never become as
fluent as native speakers/signers
Language influences Thinking
Whorf contended that language determines the
way we think (linguistic determinism), different
language impose different conceptions or reality
A person may think differently in different
languages
Many bilinguals repot that hey have different
sense of self, depending on what language they
are using
Language influences thinking
Our words influenced our thinking
To expand language is to expand the
ability to think
It pays to increase your word power
Bilingual children who learn to inhibit
one language while using the other are
also better able to inhibit their attention
to irrelevant information
Thinking in images
Mental practice has become a standard
part of training
Mental rehearsal can also help you
achieve an academic goal
Much of info processing occurs outside
of consciousness
Thinking and Language
Thinking affects our language, which
them affects our thought!