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PSY 369: Psycholinguistics. Language Acquisition: Learning words. Typical language development. 12 Months Uses one or more words with meaning (this may be a fragment of a word) Understands simple instructions, especially if vocal or physical cues are given
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PSY 369: Psycholinguistics Language Acquisition: Learning words
Typical language development 12 Months • Uses one or more words with meaning (this may be a fragment of a word) • Understands simple instructions, especially if vocal or physical cues are given • Practices inflection Is aware of the social value of speech
Typical language development 18 Months • Has vocabulary of approximately 5-20 words • Vocabulary made up chiefly of nouns • Some echolalia (repeating a word or phrase over and over) • Is able to follow simple commands
Typical language development 24 Months • Can name a number of objects common to his surroundings • Is able to use at least two prepositions • Combines words into a short sentence • Vocabulary of approximately 150-300 words • Volume and pitch of voice not yet well-controlled
Typical language development 36 Months • Use pronouns I, you, me correctly • Is using some plurals and past tenses • Knows at least three prepositions • Handles three word sentences easily • Has in the neighborhood of 900-1000 words • About 90% of what child says should be intelligible • Verbs begin to predominate
Language Sponges • Lots of individual differences • But there is also a consistent pattern
12 ms first words 2 yrs 200 words 3 yrs 1,000 words 6 yrs 15,000 words Language Sponges • Learning words • About 3,000 new words per year, especially in the primary grades • As many as 8 new words per day • Production typically lags behind comprehension
Vocabulary growth • Methods used to study this • Observational data (60s to present) • Diary studies • Parents record their kids language development • Taped language samples (Roger Brown) • Small numbers of children (Eve, Adam, Sarah) • Went to home every month made tape recordings • Extensive study needed • Hard to kids to “say all the words you know” or “say a question” • Early phonological production isn’t like adult production, often need to take great care deciding what the child meant • Large database CHILDES • Many kids, many languages, including children with language difficulties
Early speech production Of course he said “arf.” What else did you expect his first word to be?
Early speech production • Developed in systematic ways • Sometimes simplifications of adult speech • Or relate to sounds of the objects • Demonstrate • Creative, not simply imitation • Learned importance of consistency of names • First words • Around 10-15 months (lots of individual differences) • Emergence of systematic, repeated productions of phonologically consistent forms • Idiomorphs - personalized words
Early speech production • Typically context bound (relevant to the immediate environment) • Important people • Objects that move • Objects that can be acted upon • Familiar actions • Nouns before verbs • First words • Around 10-15 months (lots of individual differences) • Emergence of systematic, repeated productions of phonologically consistent forms • Idiomorphs - personalized words Charlie’s words
Semantic Development • 1-general names • dog • 2- specific names • mommy • 3-action words • 4-modifiers • red • 5-personal/social • yes, no, please • 6-functional • what
Later words • Then: • Children come to use words in more adult-like ways • Words start to be used in wider range of contexts • Children use wider range of word types: • referential words (ball, doggie, chair) • proper names (Mummy, Spot) • actions (open, wash, tickle) • properties, states, qualities (more, gone, up, on, dirty) • social-pragmatic words (no, please) • few ‘frozen’ phrases (all gone, what’s that)
Early speech production • Transition to speech No. … my fis. No. My fis! This is your fis? Yes, my fis. Your fis? Oh, your fish.
Early speech production • Transition to speech This is your fis? No, … my fis. • Can’t hear the difference? • Rejects adult saying fis • Can’t produce the correct sounds? • Sometimes, but evidence suggests not always the case • More general process of simplification • “frees up” resources for concentrating on other aspects of language learning Your fis. No, my fis. Oh, your fish. Yes, my fis.
Early speech production • Transition to speech • Early words • Common Phonological processes • Reduction • Delete sounds from words • Coalescence • Combine different syllables into one syllable • Assimilation • Change one sound into a similar sound within the word • Reduplication • One syllable from a multi-syllabic word is repeated
Please give me the chromium tray. Not the blue one, the chromium one. Learning word meanings • Learning words • Fast mapping • Using the context to guess the meaning of a word • All got the olive tray • Several weeks later still had some of the meaning
Learning word meanings • Learning words • Extension • Finding the appropriate limits of the meaning of words • Underextension • applying a word too narrowly • Overextension • applying a word too broadly
Extensions of meaning “tee”
Extensions of meaning “tee” 1:9,11
Extensions of meaning “tee” 1:9,11 1:10,18
Extensions of meaning “tee” 1:9,11 1:10,18 “googie” 1:11,1
Extensions of meaning “tee” 1:9,11 1:10,18 “googie” 1:11,1 1:11,2
Extensions of meaning “tee” 1:9,11 1:10,18 “googie” 1:11,1 1:11,2 1:11,24
Extensions of meaning “tee” 1:9,11 1:10,18 “googie” 1:11,1 1:11,2 1:11,24 “tee/hosh” 1:11,25
Extensions of meaning “tee” 1:9,11 1:10,18 “googie” 1:11,1 1:11,2 1:11,24 “tee/hosh” 1:11,25 “hosh” 1:11,26
Extensions of meaning “tee” 1:9,11 1:10,18 “googie” 1:11,1 1:11,2 1:11,24 “tee/hosh” 1:11,25 “hosh” 1:11,26 1:11,27 “pushi”
Extensions of meaning “tee” 1:9,11 1:10,18 “googie” 1:11,1 1:11,2 1:11,24 “tee/hosh” 1:11,25 “hosh” 1:11,26 1:11,27 “pushi” “hosh” “moo-ka” 2:0,10
Extensions of meaning “tee” 1:9,11 1:10,18 “googie” 1:11,1 1:11,2 1:11,24 “tee/hosh” 1:11,25 “hosh” 1:11,26 1:11,27 “pushi” “hosh” “moo-ka” 2:0,10 2:0,20 “biggie googie”
Strategies for learning • One-word-per-referent • If a new word comes in for a referent that is already named, replace it • Exception to that was “horse,” but it only lasted a day here Things to notice
Strategies for learning • Over and under Extension can occur at the same time Things to notice
Strategies for learning Things to notice • Child tries different things, if a word doesn’t work then try something else • e.g., hosh didn’t for for the large dog, switched to biggie doggie
Learning word meanings • Learning words • Learning the meanings of words • Quine’s problem • Whole object • Mutual exclusivity
Frog Frog? Green? Ugly? Jumping? Indeterminacy: Frog
Frog Frog? Green? Ugly? Jumping? Quine’s gavagai problem • The problem of reference: • a word may refer to a number of referents (real world objects) • a single object or event has many objects, parts and features that can be referred to
Constraints on Word Learning • Markman (1989) • Perhaps children are biased to entertain certain hypotheses about word meanings over others • These first guesses save them from logical ambiguity, and keep them logical confusion, and get them started out on the right track
Strategies for learning Object-scope (whole object) constraint • words refer to whole objects rather than to parts of objects Taxonomic constraint • words refer to categories of similar objects Mutual exclusivity constraint • each object has one label & different words refer to separate, non-overlapping categories of objects
Language explosion continues • The language explosion is not just the result of simple semantic development; the child is not just adding more words to his/her vocabulary. • Child is mastering basic syntactic and morphological rules.