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Basic Issues in Language and
Speech Processing
Chapter 9
Lawrence Heller, Psy.D.
LINGUISTICS
• Linguistics (n.) The scientific study of language;
also called linguistic science. (David
Crystal:2008)
Psycholinguistics
• The study of the processes involved in using
language
• Psycholinguists are interested in exactly how
we execute our language abilities known as
linguistic performance
• The relatively pure knowledge of language
and its rules is called linguistic competence.
Study of human language
Anatomy of Language
• Brain
– Size
– Laterality
– Wernicke’s area
– Broca’s area
– Motor cortex
Motor cortex
What is language?
• Language is defined as a set of symbols (i.e.,
words) and rules or principles for the
combination (i.e., grammar) of those symbols
that allow for communication and
comprehension
Mental Lexicon
• We use words to communicate with a wide
variety of thousands of words to describe our
thoughts, feelings, and anything else we want
to communicate. The mental lexicon is all of
the words a person knows. This can also be
described as a mental library.
Semantic Memory
• The mental library is a significant dimension of
Semantic Memory.
• Each representation of the mental lexicon
contains more than just the meaning of a
word but the sound of each word, its written
form, and the roles it can take on in a
sentence. (e.g., noun, verb, etc.)
• Grammar- the rules that govern how words
may be combined.
Other Communication
• Human:
– Direct
• Body language (kinesics), tone of voice, personal space
(proxemics), gesture
– Indirect
• Writing, mathematics, music, painting, signs
Design Features of Language
• Language is distinguished by a number of design
features, which include:
• Semanticity- the symbols of language reflect
real-world objects, events, and ideas; they have
meaning
• The symbols of language exhibit arbitrariness, in
that they in no way represent the concepts to
which they refer.
• For example, there’s no reason why C-A-T should
denote the four-legged furry friends that says
meow.
Design Features of Language
• Language has the power to transport us in time
with the use of tenses, using combinations of
words about he future or past. Language allows
for Displacement in time.
• Prevarication- Language allows for deception; we
can lie
• Reflectiveness-we can use language to talk about
language
• Productivity-we can generate infinite
combinations from finite symbols
Structure of Language
• Phonology (sounds)
• Morphology (words)
• Syntax (sentence structure)
• Semantics (meaning)
• Pragmatics or grammar (rules)
Structure of Language - Phonology
• The study of sounds of a language.
• No human language uses all the sounds
humans can make.
• When communicating first, sounds must be
perceived.
• Second, they must activate representations of
the corresponding concepts in semantic
memory (object recognition).
Phonology
• Bottom up processing refers to the
identification of a pattern based on the
component data
• Speech perception involves more than just the
compilation of speech data.
• Speech signals are unclear or imperfect
• We need to rely on surrounding information
(context) or previous knowledge (i.e. top-
down processing) to make the signal clear.
Phones
• A phone is an acoustically distinct sound.
• For example, the /o/ in ‘boat’ as spoken by
a person from Minnesota might be physically
different from how a New Yorker might say it.
While the two sounds are phonetically
different this does not change the meaning of
the word.
Phonemes
• A phoneme is a category of speech sounds
that change the meaning of a word.
• The phonemes /b/ and /p/ are
phonemically different from each other and
yield quite different concepts when combined
with the segment -ig
Phonemes
• Vowel Phonemes involve a continuous flow of air
through the vocal tract and are a product of positions
of the tongue.
• Consonant phonemes involve some kind of obstruction
of the airflow in the vocal tract and are produced by
varying three dimensions:
– 1) Place of articulation-part of the vocal tract used to
make the sound
– 2) Manner of articulation-refers to how exactly the airflow
is obstructed
– 3) Voicing-refers to what the vocal cords do when the
airflow disruption stops
Phonemes
• Coarticulation- the nature of phoneme
transmission varies depending on neighboring
phonemes (what they are next to). Phonemes
are to some extent articulated together.
– For example, the /a/ in CAT sounds different than
the /a/ in BAD because is it surrounded by
different phonemes.
Phoneme Boundaries
• The invariance in perceiving phonemes in
spite of their different acoustical properties is
the result of categorical perception.
• Categorical perception is our tendency to not
discriminate between subtle shadings in the
way a particular phoneme sound.
Phoneme Boundaries
Have you ever wondered why it is hard to
understand non-native speakers of English?
• The reason is related to categorical perception-
their pronunciation of English phonemes is
sometimes phonetically different enough that it
doesn’t fit with our English phoneme categories.
• We only understand and produce the phonemes
of our native language
Structure of Language - Morphology
• Morphemes are the smallest units of language that
carry meaning.
• It may refer to a single word or to a prefix or suffix
that changes the precise meaning of the word
– Words (dog, cat) = free morphemes (stand alone)
– Prefixes (un-, sub-)
– Syllables (-s, -ly )
= bound morphemes
Producing (or “Morphing” the Spoken
Word)
• Transformation of words may rely on two
separate systems
– One for regular forms and one for irregular forms
• Around age 3 or so, children begin to make
mistakes termed over-regularizations. This is
where the child extends a grammatical rule too
far, treating an irregular form as a regular one.
– For instance, adding “ed” to “go” to come up with the
past tense “goed.”
Producing (or “Morphing” the Spoken
Word)
• As the child gets older, they make mistakes
they have ever made before but gradually are
able to tell when the rule applies and when it
doesn’t.
Perceiving the Spoken Word
• According to the Cohort Model of word
recognition:
• Spoken words are recognized by activating the
entire set of possible words based on the
word’s initial sound. With a subsequent
narrowing of the candidate set as more of the
word is perceived.
TRACE Model
• One of the main alternatives to the cohort
model is the TRACE model
• This model is similar to the cohort model in
that it involves a process of evidence
accumulation.
TRACE Model
• The TRACE model does a better job of
accounting for Top-Down Processing (previous
knowledge can help you identify a spoken
word)
– For Example, “Greg heard the meowing, and knew
it was time to get out of bed to feed the ______
TRACE Model
• The TRACE model assumes an interaction
between multiple levels of word
representation and better accounts for the
effects of context in word recognition, which is
affected by prosody.
• Prosody- the rhythm, stress, and intonation of
speech.
Say it with (opposite) feeling
• For example, you might express how upset
you have been over a difficult situation at
work and how you have no time to study for
your upcoming exam. You can say it with a
cheery disposition and big smile.
• How Language Shapes the Way We think
Bottom Up Factors
• A variety of factors for facilitating the
determination of word boundaries
• Phonotactic Knowledge
– Our sensitivity to the rules that govern phonemes
(i.e., sound) combinations in various languages.
– For example, the phonemes /t/ and /zh/ are never
combined in English.
– For example, /h/ frequenty starts a word but
never ends one.
Bottom Up Factors
• Metrical Segmentation
– Segmentation of words is dependent on the
phonology of a particular language.
– For instance, in English the important (content)
words in a sentence are more likely to start with a
strong syllable (one that contains a short or long
vowel sound and end with a weak syllable. (bacon,
candor)
Top-Down Factors
• Have you ever heard someone speak in a
foreign language and it sounds like they are
speaking a mile a minute.
• This is kind of an illusion, caused by lack of
familiarity with the language.
• Word boundaries are blurred, when people
are speaking naturally in conversations.
Mental Lexicon
• Word Frequency
• High frequency and non-ambiguous words
(e.g., house) are more easily accessed than
low-frequency and ambiguous words (e.g.,
bungalow).
• When ambiguous words are encountered
Mental Lexicon
• Lexical Ambiguity
– When a word with two possible meanings (e.g.,
bank) is encountered.
– Both meanings are temporarily activated
– The context in which the word is used leads to
disambiguation
Bilingual Individuals
• People that can speak two language seem to
have a common semantic memory store
underlying the two lexicons.
SYNTAX AND SEMANTICS
• Broca’s Aphasia
– Frontal lobe damage
– Speech is telegraphic and incorrectly structured
– Use of content words (i.e., nouns and verbs) is less
affected.
SYNTAX AND SEMANTICS
• Wernicke’s Aphasia
– Associated with Temporal Lobe damage
– Breakdown of the semantic aspects of language
• A person with this type of aphasia may speak with
intact sentence structures, but distorted choice of
content words
• Brocas and Wernicke’s aphasia
Structure of Language - Syntax
• Rules for how to put together sentences and phrases.
Structure of Language - Semantics
• The meaning of symbols, words, phrases, and
sentences of a language.
SYNTAX AND SEMANTICS
• According to linguist Noam Chomsky, we are
born with an implicit sensitivity to sentence
structure and the rules of syntax.
• Chomsky’s approach- termed
transformational grammar
Transformational Grammar
• A sentence exists as both a deep structure
that represents meaning and a surface
structure that conveys it.
• Sentences can have the same surface
structure but different deep structures.
• Also, different surface structures can be
associated with the same deep structures.
Universal Grammar
• Because Chomsky’s principles apply regardless
of language they are referred to as universal
grammar.
• The notion of universal grammar has a
challenge:
– The claim that languages are much too diverse to
support the idea that the same underlying (i.e.,
universal) grammar can account for all of them.
•
Phrase Structure, Surface Structure,
And Deep Structure
• Phrase Structure-this involves breaking a sentence
down into its component phrases, termed constituents
• For example, “The engaging professor entertained the
class.
• This would be broken down into two major phrases or
constituents.
• A noun phrase, “The engaging professor”
• A verb phrase, “entertained the class.
• Each of these in turn can be further broken down into
an article- “the”, an adjective-“engaging”, and an
object- “class”
Phrase Structure
• At times it is hard to understand the meaning
of a sentence just based on phrase structure.
– Such as the sentence-“The shooting of the
hunters was terrible.”
Phrase Structure, Surface Structure,
And Deep Structure
• Chomsky thought that sentences must exist at
two levels both as an idea and a concrete
representation of that idea which he described as
deep structure and surface structure.
• Deep Structure- this part of the sentence conveys
its meaning
• Surface Structure-this part of the sentence is the
particular ordering used to convey that meaning.
Challenges to Chomsky’s Theories
• 1) Language may not be so universal- there
are so many languages to say his theory
applies to all of them is questionable
• 2) Language may not be un-learnable- the
structural aspects of language may be
learnable.
The Constraint Based Approach
• Proposes that language is learnable via the same
cognitive and brain mechanisms used for other
tasks.
• Probabilistic constraints within language can be
exploited by neural networks during the
language-learning process.
• Child Directed Speech (CDS) is one rich source of
information that allows developing infants to pick
up on words, word boundaries, and syntax.
• The prosody (rhythm, stress, and intonation) of
CDS serves both a linguistic and an emotional
function.
Modern Technology
• Modern technologies such as TV, phones, tablets,
computers, video cameras, etc. can have a detrimental
effect on frequency of CDS (speech that is directed at the
child typically from an adult.
• If the TV is on in the background the child may not pay
attention to it. However, the adult is paying attention to the
TV(or other technology).
• Thus there is a reduction in speech directed at the child.
• The impact of not talking to your child or talking less has
long term effects on language development.
“Talk to your kids!”
PRAGMATICS
• Pragmatics are the practical knowledge we
need to use language effectively during
conversation.
Conversational Structure
• Conversations usually have a standard structure that
includes a greeting, turn-taking, and a little overlap.
• Grice (1975) identified several characteristics that
seem to define the unwritten contract of conversation.
• 1) Quantity-say as much as you need to, but not more.
• 2) Quality- don’t say things that you know to be false;
don’t say things for which you lack evidence.
• 3) Relation- Be relevant to the topic at hand.
• 4) Manner- Be clear; avoid obscurity and ambiguity.
EXPERIMENT
• Experiment: in conversation deliberately
violate these Gricean Maxims and see what
happens.
Gender and Conversation
• Lakoff (1975) observational sociological study:
– 1) Women tend to be more polite
– 2) Women tend to use more tag questions (questions at
the end of a statement.
• In a meta-analysis by Anderson and Leaper (1998), men
are more likely to interrupt than women are, but the
effect is small.
• Men make more intrusive interruptions than women.
• Women and Men seem to use about the same number
of words in everyday speech.
Language Production and Perception
• Stages of Speech Production
• 1) Conceptualizing what we want to say
• 2) Develop a Linguistic Plan- organizing your
thoughts in terms of language.
• 3) Articulating the Linguistic Plan.
• 4) Monitoring-keep track of what we’re saying
and whether the message and tone are as
intended.
Slips of the Tongue
• Shift- one speech segment disappears from its location
and reappears elsewhere.
• Exchange- two segments change places
• Anticipation-when a later segment replaces an earlier
one
• Perseveration-earlier segments replaces later segment
but does not disappear from its appropriate location.
• Addition- inserting something
• Deletion-leaving something out
• Substitution-intruder replaces an intended segment
• Blend-two words combine into one.
Slips of the Tongue
Slips of the Tongue
• Slips can be motivational as in Freudian Slips
but these are the exception, not the rule.
Self-Monitoring
• We often engage in self-repair- we stop
ourselves and correct what we just said.
• “Scratch that, reverse it.”
– -Charlie and the chocolate factory
Self-Monitoring
• Levelt (1983)- self-repairs have a consistent
structure
• 1) We interrupt ourselves when we detect an
error
• 2) We issue what might be termed an editing
expression, like “um,” “Oh wait,” or “sorry”
• 3) We “repair” what we’ve just said by saying
such things as “er….I mean.”
Speech Perception
• Modular View-language is made up of a
unique set of abilities and capacities that can
not be reduced to or explained solely in terms
of other cognitive processes. It is species-
specific and innate (present from birth)
• Non-Modular View-language is the joint
production of cognitive processes reviewed
thus far.
Motor Theory of Speech Production
• Posits a close link between the mechanisms we
use to articulate speech and our perception of
speech.
• Liberman and Whalen (2000)
– 1) Because only humans possess the mechanisms
necessary for speech, only humans are capable of
understanding speech.
– 2) Speech perception is innate; infants are born with
the representations that allow for speech perception
and production.
Non-Modular Theories of Speech
Perception
• Auditory Theory- speech perception is the
product of “regular” auditory perceptual
processes.
– No special mechanism necessary.
– Other species have auditory systems similar to our
own, so the ability to perceive speech sounds
should not be unique to humans.
Ch 9 Language and Speech Processing.pptx

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Ch 9 Language and Speech Processing.pptx

  • 1. Basic Issues in Language and Speech Processing Chapter 9 Lawrence Heller, Psy.D.
  • 2. LINGUISTICS • Linguistics (n.) The scientific study of language; also called linguistic science. (David Crystal:2008)
  • 3. Psycholinguistics • The study of the processes involved in using language • Psycholinguists are interested in exactly how we execute our language abilities known as linguistic performance • The relatively pure knowledge of language and its rules is called linguistic competence.
  • 4. Study of human language
  • 5. Anatomy of Language • Brain – Size – Laterality – Wernicke’s area – Broca’s area – Motor cortex Motor cortex
  • 6. What is language? • Language is defined as a set of symbols (i.e., words) and rules or principles for the combination (i.e., grammar) of those symbols that allow for communication and comprehension
  • 7. Mental Lexicon • We use words to communicate with a wide variety of thousands of words to describe our thoughts, feelings, and anything else we want to communicate. The mental lexicon is all of the words a person knows. This can also be described as a mental library.
  • 8. Semantic Memory • The mental library is a significant dimension of Semantic Memory. • Each representation of the mental lexicon contains more than just the meaning of a word but the sound of each word, its written form, and the roles it can take on in a sentence. (e.g., noun, verb, etc.) • Grammar- the rules that govern how words may be combined.
  • 9. Other Communication • Human: – Direct • Body language (kinesics), tone of voice, personal space (proxemics), gesture – Indirect • Writing, mathematics, music, painting, signs
  • 10. Design Features of Language • Language is distinguished by a number of design features, which include: • Semanticity- the symbols of language reflect real-world objects, events, and ideas; they have meaning • The symbols of language exhibit arbitrariness, in that they in no way represent the concepts to which they refer. • For example, there’s no reason why C-A-T should denote the four-legged furry friends that says meow.
  • 11. Design Features of Language • Language has the power to transport us in time with the use of tenses, using combinations of words about he future or past. Language allows for Displacement in time. • Prevarication- Language allows for deception; we can lie • Reflectiveness-we can use language to talk about language • Productivity-we can generate infinite combinations from finite symbols
  • 12. Structure of Language • Phonology (sounds) • Morphology (words) • Syntax (sentence structure) • Semantics (meaning) • Pragmatics or grammar (rules)
  • 13. Structure of Language - Phonology • The study of sounds of a language. • No human language uses all the sounds humans can make. • When communicating first, sounds must be perceived. • Second, they must activate representations of the corresponding concepts in semantic memory (object recognition).
  • 14. Phonology • Bottom up processing refers to the identification of a pattern based on the component data • Speech perception involves more than just the compilation of speech data. • Speech signals are unclear or imperfect • We need to rely on surrounding information (context) or previous knowledge (i.e. top- down processing) to make the signal clear.
  • 15. Phones • A phone is an acoustically distinct sound. • For example, the /o/ in ‘boat’ as spoken by a person from Minnesota might be physically different from how a New Yorker might say it. While the two sounds are phonetically different this does not change the meaning of the word.
  • 16. Phonemes • A phoneme is a category of speech sounds that change the meaning of a word. • The phonemes /b/ and /p/ are phonemically different from each other and yield quite different concepts when combined with the segment -ig
  • 17. Phonemes • Vowel Phonemes involve a continuous flow of air through the vocal tract and are a product of positions of the tongue. • Consonant phonemes involve some kind of obstruction of the airflow in the vocal tract and are produced by varying three dimensions: – 1) Place of articulation-part of the vocal tract used to make the sound – 2) Manner of articulation-refers to how exactly the airflow is obstructed – 3) Voicing-refers to what the vocal cords do when the airflow disruption stops
  • 18. Phonemes • Coarticulation- the nature of phoneme transmission varies depending on neighboring phonemes (what they are next to). Phonemes are to some extent articulated together. – For example, the /a/ in CAT sounds different than the /a/ in BAD because is it surrounded by different phonemes.
  • 19. Phoneme Boundaries • The invariance in perceiving phonemes in spite of their different acoustical properties is the result of categorical perception. • Categorical perception is our tendency to not discriminate between subtle shadings in the way a particular phoneme sound.
  • 20. Phoneme Boundaries Have you ever wondered why it is hard to understand non-native speakers of English? • The reason is related to categorical perception- their pronunciation of English phonemes is sometimes phonetically different enough that it doesn’t fit with our English phoneme categories. • We only understand and produce the phonemes of our native language
  • 21. Structure of Language - Morphology • Morphemes are the smallest units of language that carry meaning. • It may refer to a single word or to a prefix or suffix that changes the precise meaning of the word – Words (dog, cat) = free morphemes (stand alone) – Prefixes (un-, sub-) – Syllables (-s, -ly ) = bound morphemes
  • 22. Producing (or “Morphing” the Spoken Word) • Transformation of words may rely on two separate systems – One for regular forms and one for irregular forms • Around age 3 or so, children begin to make mistakes termed over-regularizations. This is where the child extends a grammatical rule too far, treating an irregular form as a regular one. – For instance, adding “ed” to “go” to come up with the past tense “goed.”
  • 23. Producing (or “Morphing” the Spoken Word) • As the child gets older, they make mistakes they have ever made before but gradually are able to tell when the rule applies and when it doesn’t.
  • 24. Perceiving the Spoken Word • According to the Cohort Model of word recognition: • Spoken words are recognized by activating the entire set of possible words based on the word’s initial sound. With a subsequent narrowing of the candidate set as more of the word is perceived.
  • 25. TRACE Model • One of the main alternatives to the cohort model is the TRACE model • This model is similar to the cohort model in that it involves a process of evidence accumulation.
  • 26. TRACE Model • The TRACE model does a better job of accounting for Top-Down Processing (previous knowledge can help you identify a spoken word) – For Example, “Greg heard the meowing, and knew it was time to get out of bed to feed the ______
  • 27. TRACE Model • The TRACE model assumes an interaction between multiple levels of word representation and better accounts for the effects of context in word recognition, which is affected by prosody. • Prosody- the rhythm, stress, and intonation of speech.
  • 28. Say it with (opposite) feeling • For example, you might express how upset you have been over a difficult situation at work and how you have no time to study for your upcoming exam. You can say it with a cheery disposition and big smile.
  • 29. • How Language Shapes the Way We think
  • 30. Bottom Up Factors • A variety of factors for facilitating the determination of word boundaries • Phonotactic Knowledge – Our sensitivity to the rules that govern phonemes (i.e., sound) combinations in various languages. – For example, the phonemes /t/ and /zh/ are never combined in English. – For example, /h/ frequenty starts a word but never ends one.
  • 31. Bottom Up Factors • Metrical Segmentation – Segmentation of words is dependent on the phonology of a particular language. – For instance, in English the important (content) words in a sentence are more likely to start with a strong syllable (one that contains a short or long vowel sound and end with a weak syllable. (bacon, candor)
  • 32. Top-Down Factors • Have you ever heard someone speak in a foreign language and it sounds like they are speaking a mile a minute. • This is kind of an illusion, caused by lack of familiarity with the language. • Word boundaries are blurred, when people are speaking naturally in conversations.
  • 33. Mental Lexicon • Word Frequency • High frequency and non-ambiguous words (e.g., house) are more easily accessed than low-frequency and ambiguous words (e.g., bungalow). • When ambiguous words are encountered
  • 34. Mental Lexicon • Lexical Ambiguity – When a word with two possible meanings (e.g., bank) is encountered. – Both meanings are temporarily activated – The context in which the word is used leads to disambiguation
  • 35. Bilingual Individuals • People that can speak two language seem to have a common semantic memory store underlying the two lexicons.
  • 36. SYNTAX AND SEMANTICS • Broca’s Aphasia – Frontal lobe damage – Speech is telegraphic and incorrectly structured – Use of content words (i.e., nouns and verbs) is less affected.
  • 37. SYNTAX AND SEMANTICS • Wernicke’s Aphasia – Associated with Temporal Lobe damage – Breakdown of the semantic aspects of language • A person with this type of aphasia may speak with intact sentence structures, but distorted choice of content words • Brocas and Wernicke’s aphasia
  • 38. Structure of Language - Syntax • Rules for how to put together sentences and phrases.
  • 39. Structure of Language - Semantics • The meaning of symbols, words, phrases, and sentences of a language.
  • 40. SYNTAX AND SEMANTICS • According to linguist Noam Chomsky, we are born with an implicit sensitivity to sentence structure and the rules of syntax. • Chomsky’s approach- termed transformational grammar
  • 41. Transformational Grammar • A sentence exists as both a deep structure that represents meaning and a surface structure that conveys it. • Sentences can have the same surface structure but different deep structures. • Also, different surface structures can be associated with the same deep structures.
  • 42. Universal Grammar • Because Chomsky’s principles apply regardless of language they are referred to as universal grammar. • The notion of universal grammar has a challenge: – The claim that languages are much too diverse to support the idea that the same underlying (i.e., universal) grammar can account for all of them. •
  • 43. Phrase Structure, Surface Structure, And Deep Structure • Phrase Structure-this involves breaking a sentence down into its component phrases, termed constituents • For example, “The engaging professor entertained the class. • This would be broken down into two major phrases or constituents. • A noun phrase, “The engaging professor” • A verb phrase, “entertained the class. • Each of these in turn can be further broken down into an article- “the”, an adjective-“engaging”, and an object- “class”
  • 44. Phrase Structure • At times it is hard to understand the meaning of a sentence just based on phrase structure. – Such as the sentence-“The shooting of the hunters was terrible.”
  • 45. Phrase Structure, Surface Structure, And Deep Structure • Chomsky thought that sentences must exist at two levels both as an idea and a concrete representation of that idea which he described as deep structure and surface structure. • Deep Structure- this part of the sentence conveys its meaning • Surface Structure-this part of the sentence is the particular ordering used to convey that meaning.
  • 46. Challenges to Chomsky’s Theories • 1) Language may not be so universal- there are so many languages to say his theory applies to all of them is questionable • 2) Language may not be un-learnable- the structural aspects of language may be learnable.
  • 47. The Constraint Based Approach • Proposes that language is learnable via the same cognitive and brain mechanisms used for other tasks. • Probabilistic constraints within language can be exploited by neural networks during the language-learning process. • Child Directed Speech (CDS) is one rich source of information that allows developing infants to pick up on words, word boundaries, and syntax. • The prosody (rhythm, stress, and intonation) of CDS serves both a linguistic and an emotional function.
  • 48. Modern Technology • Modern technologies such as TV, phones, tablets, computers, video cameras, etc. can have a detrimental effect on frequency of CDS (speech that is directed at the child typically from an adult. • If the TV is on in the background the child may not pay attention to it. However, the adult is paying attention to the TV(or other technology). • Thus there is a reduction in speech directed at the child. • The impact of not talking to your child or talking less has long term effects on language development. “Talk to your kids!”
  • 49. PRAGMATICS • Pragmatics are the practical knowledge we need to use language effectively during conversation.
  • 50. Conversational Structure • Conversations usually have a standard structure that includes a greeting, turn-taking, and a little overlap. • Grice (1975) identified several characteristics that seem to define the unwritten contract of conversation. • 1) Quantity-say as much as you need to, but not more. • 2) Quality- don’t say things that you know to be false; don’t say things for which you lack evidence. • 3) Relation- Be relevant to the topic at hand. • 4) Manner- Be clear; avoid obscurity and ambiguity.
  • 51. EXPERIMENT • Experiment: in conversation deliberately violate these Gricean Maxims and see what happens.
  • 52. Gender and Conversation • Lakoff (1975) observational sociological study: – 1) Women tend to be more polite – 2) Women tend to use more tag questions (questions at the end of a statement. • In a meta-analysis by Anderson and Leaper (1998), men are more likely to interrupt than women are, but the effect is small. • Men make more intrusive interruptions than women. • Women and Men seem to use about the same number of words in everyday speech.
  • 53. Language Production and Perception • Stages of Speech Production • 1) Conceptualizing what we want to say • 2) Develop a Linguistic Plan- organizing your thoughts in terms of language. • 3) Articulating the Linguistic Plan. • 4) Monitoring-keep track of what we’re saying and whether the message and tone are as intended.
  • 54. Slips of the Tongue • Shift- one speech segment disappears from its location and reappears elsewhere. • Exchange- two segments change places • Anticipation-when a later segment replaces an earlier one • Perseveration-earlier segments replaces later segment but does not disappear from its appropriate location. • Addition- inserting something • Deletion-leaving something out • Substitution-intruder replaces an intended segment • Blend-two words combine into one.
  • 55. Slips of the Tongue
  • 56. Slips of the Tongue • Slips can be motivational as in Freudian Slips but these are the exception, not the rule.
  • 57. Self-Monitoring • We often engage in self-repair- we stop ourselves and correct what we just said. • “Scratch that, reverse it.” – -Charlie and the chocolate factory
  • 58. Self-Monitoring • Levelt (1983)- self-repairs have a consistent structure • 1) We interrupt ourselves when we detect an error • 2) We issue what might be termed an editing expression, like “um,” “Oh wait,” or “sorry” • 3) We “repair” what we’ve just said by saying such things as “er….I mean.”
  • 59. Speech Perception • Modular View-language is made up of a unique set of abilities and capacities that can not be reduced to or explained solely in terms of other cognitive processes. It is species- specific and innate (present from birth) • Non-Modular View-language is the joint production of cognitive processes reviewed thus far.
  • 60. Motor Theory of Speech Production • Posits a close link between the mechanisms we use to articulate speech and our perception of speech. • Liberman and Whalen (2000) – 1) Because only humans possess the mechanisms necessary for speech, only humans are capable of understanding speech. – 2) Speech perception is innate; infants are born with the representations that allow for speech perception and production.
  • 61. Non-Modular Theories of Speech Perception • Auditory Theory- speech perception is the product of “regular” auditory perceptual processes. – No special mechanism necessary. – Other species have auditory systems similar to our own, so the ability to perceive speech sounds should not be unique to humans.