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Language and Speech Development Quiz 1
N/A
97
Education
Undergraduate 3
09/22/2010

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Term
Communication
Definition
the sending and recieveing of emotions, ideas, feelings or concepts
Term
Language
Definition
a system of abstract symbols and rule-governed structures, the specific conventions of which are learned
Term
Speech
Definition
Oral expression of language
Term
echolalia
Definition
an imitation of words, phrases, or even whole sentences in the absence of an understanding of what they are saying
Term
True or False: Speech is Language and Language is Speech.
Definition
FALSE - Speech and language work interdependently of each other.
Term
TRUE OR FALSE: Communication requires the use of language.
Definition
FALSE - Communication can use many different things like facial expressions, body language, etc.
Term
Which of Hockett's Design Features most effectively separates human communication from animal communication? Why?
Definition
Displacement becuase of the fact taht we can talk about things that are distant in time and space and animals only think in the here and now
Term
Semantics
Definition
meaning of word and how we use them, system of language
Term
Syntax
Definition
sentence structure, how you put sentences together
Term
Is braille a language?
Definition
No, braille is not a language
Term
Why is it important to understand the Speech Chain?
Definition
It allows the brains of a speaker and a listener to connect in a communicative sense
Term
Who is Nom Chomsky? and When did he come on the scene?
Definition
One of the first people involved in language and he came on the scene in the 1960s
Term
phonology
Definition
the sounds of language
Term
pragmatics
Definition
how we use the language - language in the social context is very different
Term
Speech Chain
Definition
Speaker's Brain - speaker decides what they want to express - message put into lanuage form - neural impulses send out speech movements - sounds waves are created - the sound waves are recieved by listener's hearing - the waves are transformed into the message that the speaker was conveying
Term
Who is Charles F. Hockett?
Definition
one of hte first linguists to take a detailed, analytical look at the characteristics of human speech in comparison to the communication systems of other animals.
Term
What was the name of the essay that Hockett wrote?
Definition
"The Origin of Speech"
Term
How many design features did Hockett have?
Definition
13
Term
Vocal-Auditory Channel
Definition
humans communicate by forcing air through the vocal folds of the larynx and breaking the vibrating air stream into sounds of speech, which are organized into words and sentences
Term
Broadcast transmission and directional reception
Definition
when speech is produced, it radiates in all directions and can be receieved by any listener in range
Term
Rapid Fading
Definition
speech signals are transitory, they are here and then they are gone
Term
Interchangeability
Definition
any human being can say anything that is said by any other human being
Term
Total Feedback
Definition
human speakers have the capacity to monitor what they say and how they say it
Term
specialization
Definition
speeck is specifically designed for communication and serves no other purpose
Term
indexicality
Definition
the rich use of presemantic, semantic, postsemantic, and extrasemantic information in huuman communication
Term
arbitrariness
Definition
nothing is inherent in a spoled word to accound for its meaning
Term
discretness
Definition
although the speech mechanism can prduce an incredibly wide range of noises, each lanugage is limited to a finite or discrete number of sounds
Term
displacement
Definition
humans can talk about things that are distant in time and space
Term
productivity
Definition
the ability to be creative in their communication efforts
Term
duality of patterning
Definition
although a given language is restricted in teh number of sounds it uses, these sounds can be combined in an infinite number of ways to produce an infinite variety of words, adn the words of language can be combined into an infinite variety of sentences.
Term
traditional transmission
Definition
speech is instinctive in humans, we ahve a genetic or biological capacity for language so powerful that few environmental factors can stop teh aquisition of speech
Term
traditional transmission
Definition
speech is instinctive in humans, we ahve a genetic or biological capacity for language so powerful that few environmental factors can stop teh aquisition of speech
Term
recursion
Definition
involves a human's ability to use acquired knowledge to create language, to imagine what others may be thinking, to engage in mental time travel to the past and the future, to think about and gain understanding of self, and to realte to a divine being in the development and demonstration of spirituality
Term
pervarication
Definition
refers to the ability of humans to inentionally decieve others in theie communications
Term
Reflexiveness - metalinguistics ability
Definition
refers to the ability of humans to use language to talk about language
Term
learnability
Definition
learning should be understood beyond the usual interaction with the environment concept
Term
What are the 4 most important of Hockett's features?
Definition
Semanticity, productivity, traditional transmission, and displacement
Term
What is the behaviorist interpretation of language aquisition?
Definition
Focus on observable behaviors and envrionment
Term
Which Theorist is most closely associated with the behaviorst interpretation?
Definition
B.F. Skinner
Term
In regards to the basic princples of operant conditioning, what is reinforcement?
Definition
when target behavior increases as a result of the response that follows it
Term
What is it called when what is reinforced is closer to the target behavior? Example: wawa, wada, water
Definition
Shaped
Term
What do the nativists stress in regards to language aquisition?
Definition
language is innate or biologically based
Term
Do nativists believe all animals have language?
Definition
No, they believe language is universal among humans and unique to humans
Term
What is the Language Aquisition Device (LAD)?
Definition
Concept that underlies nativists understanding of language development. Is a neurophysicological entity, filled with information about the rules of language structure
Term
What theorist is mostly associated with the nativist view?
Definition
Chomsky
Term
What does transformational generative grammar suggest?
Definition
The language is processed at 2 levels and 2 kinds of rules descrive what is occuring at each level
Term
What are the 2 LEVELS of transformational generative grammar?
Definition
Surface and Deep
Term
What are the 2 RULES of transformational generative grammar?
Definition
Phase structure and transformation
Term
What is the interactionist's interpretation of language acquition?
Definition
offer varying degrees of support for the roles that biology and nature play in the language acquistion process
Term
What is the semantic revolution?
Definition
When theorists shifted their focus from the structure of language conveyed by grammar to the meaning that children convey through grammar as they learn about their world
Term
Who developed case grammar theory?
Definition
Filmore
Term
Who developed cognitive theory?
Definition
Piaget
Term
What is the stage of the cognitive development that extends from birth to 2 years?
Definition
sensorimotor period
Term
What do all theorists accept or agree on?
Definition
that a relationship exists between cognitive development and language development
Term
According to the information processing theory are all children born with an internally wired system for language?
Definition
No, they are born with a potential for all kinds of connections between symbols and the things and ideas symbols can represent
Term
What is parallel distributed processing (PDP)?
Definition
That the child processes language information at a number of levels at the same time
Term
What does the language acquisition support structure (LASS) state?
Definition
Is necessary for children to have early social interactions with the important people in their lives to acquire language
Term
What is the zone of proximal development (ZPD)?
Definition
Opportunities caregivers have to provide the help children need to make steady progress in their development
Term
What is the style of speech used by adults when talking to young children?
Definition
Motherese
Term
What is expansion?
Definition
When adults repeat what a child has said but adds additional words and/or structure
Term
What is the locutionary act?
Definition
Is the expression of words, limited to the utterance itself
Term
Which act is concerned with the motive or purpose underlying an utterance?
Definition
Illoctionary Act (Force)
Term
What is the perlocutionary act?
Definition
The effect the locutionary act might have on the listener, an effect that may or may not be consistent with the speakers intentions
Term
What is the mean focus of the speech act theory?
Definition
Pragmatics
Term
What is pragmatics?
Definition
The study of the functions severed by communication
Term
What is the behaviorist interpretation?
Definition
Role of Environment
Term
How do behaviorists see children begin life?
Definition
"language tank" on empty, they become language users as their tanks are filled by experiences provided by the language models in their environment
Term
What is the key assumption of the behaviorists?
Definition
Environment is the critical and most important factor in the acquisition formula and stress the differences that are explained by the widely varying environments of children.
Term
Who is BF Skinner?
Definition
Theorist most closely associated with the behaviorist interpretation of speech and language development.
-Viewed all behaviors, including speech as learned behaviors.
-Viewed all behaviors as learned according to the operant conditioning principles.
Term
Operant
Definition
Any behavior whose frequency can be affected by the responses that follow it.
Term
Reinforcement
Definition
Occurs when target behaviors frequency of occurrence increases as a consequence of the response that follows it.
Term
Discriminative Stimulus
Definition
Ex. Parent gives child a certain look as he is receiving a gift. Look reminds child to say “thank you”. Over time the look-discriminative stimulus-comes to control the frequency with which the child says “thank you”.
Term
Delta Stimulus
Definition
Signal indicating reinforcement will not follow a particular response
Term
Adverse Stimulus
Definition
Warns of unpleasant consequences for particular behavior.
Term
Chaining
Definition
Learning behaviors through a series of sequenced events. Ex-Stringing words together in a sentence.
Term
Skinner believes verbal behaviors serve one of five functions, what are those five functions?
Definition
choic, Tact, Mand, Intraverbal, and Autoclitic
Term
Echoic
Definition
the imitation of a model in the presence of a nonverbal stimulus to which the word refers
Term
Tact
Definition
a verbal behavior used to name or label something, typically in response to things or events the speaker is discussing
Term
mand
Definition
a verbal behavior used to request, command, or make a demand, and it identifies its own reinforcer
Term
intraverbal
Definition
a production that oftens seems to have no direct connection to the utterance that precipitated it
Term
autoclitic
Definition
responses can be understood in two ways, first responses influence nad are influenced by the speaker's behaviors, second autoclitic responses account for the linking of words into sentences
Term
Who is Watson(1924)?
Definition
Categorizes language in its earliest stages as a behavior no more complicated than a habit used to influence or control the behavior of others.
Term
Staats (1971)
Definition
Classical conditioning principles to explain language acquisition. Ex-Word sit develops meaning, as it comes to represent the physical act associated with it, through the process of conditioning.
Term
What is the nativist interpretation?
Definition
Role of Biology
Term
transformational generative grammar
Definition
accounts for the production of an unlimited number of grammatically acceptable sentences with a finite number of rules. Suggests that language is processed at 2 levels and 2 kinds of rules describe what is occurring at each level.
Term
Phrase structure rules
Definition
Describe the relationships of the most basic elements of sentences while they are thoughts, before they become spoken or written.
Term
Deep
Definition
Rules are universal and operate in all languages.
Term
Transformations
Definition
Rules that describe the rearrangement of deep structures as they are moved to the next level of structure=surface.
Term
Semantic revolution-
Definition
Theorists shifted their focus from the structure of language conveyed by grammar to the meaning that children convey through grammar as they learn about their world.
Term
Semantic view-
Definition
For a language to be truly generative, it must generate meaning as well as structure. That meaning in language is expressed not only in words but also through the syntactic relationship among words.
Term
Modality
Definition
Sentence characteristics such as verb tense
Term
Proposition
Definition
Relationship between nouns and verbs in sentences and how this relationship determines the meaning underlying that sentence.
Term
Case
Definition
Refers to a specific semantic role or function that can be filled by a particular type of noun phrase.
Term
7 Universal cases
Definition
Agentive, Dative, Experiencer, Factitive, Instrumental, Locative, Objective
Term
Bloom (1970)
Definition
Asserted that transformational generative grammar is more useful in explaining children’s language if the analysis includes semantic information that can be used to help analysts draw conclusions about underlying structures.
Term
Cognitive theorists believe
Definition
Language does not hold a unique position in overall development.
Language itself is not innate but cognitive precursors for language are innate.
Language emerges as a product of cognitive organization and development.
Term
Parallel distributed processing (PDP)
Definition
Children process language information at a number of different levels at the same time. Language forms that are experienced repeatedly activate and strengthen connections in the PDP device. Other connections weaken. The connections that are most consistent with the language evidence the child is gathering is retained in the child’s communication system.
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