Language

Description

language and thought
Sneha Mittal
Flashcards by Sneha Mittal, updated more than 1 year ago
Sneha Mittal
Created by Sneha Mittal over 7 years ago
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Resource summary

Question Answer
parsing problem brain is tuned to pick up pauses between words
reference problem if a word is coupled with something, how do they know exactly what we are referring to - social referencing -novelty matching - intentionality/pedagogy -whole object assumption -category assumption
social referencing pay attention to what adults react to
novelty matching can use old info and then determine what is new and assign it to new words
intentionality/pedagogy intentional action coupled with new words; baby will couple the two; babies are attuned to us attempting to teach them something
whole object assumption innate assumption that entire object is being referenced
category assumption kids look for categories instead of individual; people look for ball and carry over to all types of balls despite different characteristics
phonology how we detect and discriminate and also how we produce sound; sounds words are embedded in
detection and discrimination words are said slightly differently each time; same way we distinguish different fonts; human mind well tuned to different sounds
Noam Chompsky revolutionized how people talk about psychology and language; all human language is identical; all have identifiable subjects, verbs, and objects
pidgin language when two speakers of different languages with no common language try to have a conversation with a makeshift language
broca's aphasia damage to frontal lobe; problem with syntax and not meaning
wernicke's aphasia damage to temporal; problem with meaning but not syntax
colorless green ideas sleep furiously rules and words are separable
implicature the action of implying a meaning beyond the literal sense of what is explicitly stated
principle of charity agreeing to make some exceptions in order to understand meaning; meaning doesn’t have to line up with words said
linguistic determinism language provides us with conceptual categories; language is our cognitive processes; different speakers have different worldviews
semantics meaning, the interface between ideas and words
syntax rules that govern how sentences are formed; responsible for our ability to take finite words and make infinite sentences
pragmatics ways in which we use language in real-life contexts and the assumptions we make about the speakers' intentions that help us interpret what they mean
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