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Theories on Language Acquisition, Lecture notes of Communication

This document includes language development, views on language acquisition [empiricist (Behaviorist, Constructivist, and Social Interactionist Approach) and rationalist view (Universal Grammar Theory) and (Critical Period Hypothesis)], and the driving forces of language acquisition.

Typology: Lecture notes

2021/2022

Available from 09/28/2022

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"infants are not born silent"
Vegetative Sounds (0-6 weeks)
crying, burping sucking
1.
Cooing and Laughter (6-16 weeks)
cooing - 6 weeks
laughter - 16 weeks
Vocal Play (16 weeks - 6 months)
speech-like sounds
vowel before consonants
3.
Babbling (6-10 months)
true syllables (vowels + consonants)
often with repetitions
jargons
between Babbling and One Word
Utterances
a syllable already has meaning
ex. "pipom" = pacifier
a sound cooccur with a situation
ex. every time mother appears, child
would babble a specific sound
not true words yet
4.
One Word Utterances (10-18 months)
single word utterances
ex. "mama", "milk"
5.
Two Word Utterances (18 months)
rapid expansion of vocabulary size
utterance of two-word sentences
ex. "Mama, milk."
6.
Telegraphic Speech (2 years)
contain a number of words but with many
grammatical errors
at two years old, children are like sponges
absorb a lot of words
7.
Basic Adult-Like Sentences (2-6 years)
increases in complexity
8.
Brief Overview of Language Development
Views on Language Acquisition
Empiricist Perspective
ideas from Locke and Hume
premise that all knowledge is derived from
experience
humans were born "tabula rasa" = blank slate
developed into behaviorist viewpoints and plays
a role in Piagetian perspective
Nurture-based
Behaviorist Approach
principles of B.F. Skinner with his Skinner's Box
experiment
rat associated food with the green button
Skinner's Box
language is acquired through a process of
stimulus-response-reward
creating associations between words and
real-life objects
constant repetition makes the association a
habit
Constructivist Approach
language develops as cognitive skills develop
a child's conception of the world is different
from an adult's conception because a child
starts with no concept of an external world
contributions from Jean Piaget by creating
Stage Theory
infants will go through different stages
that will end in adult understanding
suggests that a child first becomes
aware of a concept before they can
acquire the words for that concept
Piaget's Theory of Cognitive Development
Sensorimotor (0-2 years old)
child interacts with environment by
manipulation objects
1.
Preoperational (2-7 years old)
child begins to represent the world
symbolically
starts association
kind of imaginative
difficulty grasping abstract concepts
2.
Concrete Operational (7-12 years old)
child begins to mentally operate on
objects
logical reasoning for things they can see
cause and effect
can tell some abstract concepts (ex.
mass, weight)
3.
Formal Operational (12+ years old)
child can think hypothetically
use logic to solve problems
4.
1 - Theories on Language Acquisition
Tuesday, 20 September 2022
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"infants are not born silent"

Vegetative Sounds (0-6 weeks)

→ crying, burping sucking

Cooing and Laughter (6-16 weeks)

→ cooing - 6 weeks

→ laughter - 16 weeks

Vocal Play (16 weeks - 6 months)

→ speech-like sounds

→ vowel before consonants

Babbling (6-10 months)

→ true syllables (vowels + consonants)

→ often with repetitions

jargons

between Babbling and One Word

Utterances

  • a syllable already has meaning
  • ex. "pipom" = pacifier
  • a sound cooccur with a situation

ex. every time mother appears, child

would babble a specific sound

  • not true words yet

One Word Utterances (10-18 months)

→ single word utterances

→ ex. "mama", "milk"

Two Word Utterances (18 months)

→ rapid expansion of vocabulary size

→ utterance of two-word sentences

→ ex. "Mama, milk."

Telegraphic Speech (2 years)

contain a number of words but with many

grammatical errors

→ at two years old, children are like sponges

→ absorb a lot of words

Basic Adult-Like Sentences (2-6 years)

→ increases in complexity

Brief Overview of Language Development

Views on Language Acquisition

Empiricist Perspective

→ ideas from Locke and Hume

premise that all knowledge is derived from

experience

→ humans were born "tabula rasa" = blank slate

developed into behaviorist viewpoints and plays

a role in Piagetian perspective

→ Nurture-based

Behaviorist Approach

principles of B.F. Skinner with his Skinner's Box

experiment

  • rat associated food with the green button

→ Skinner's Box

language is acquired through a process of

stimulus-response-reward

creating associations between words and

real-life objects

constant repetition makes the association a

habit

Constructivist Approach

→ language develops as cognitive skills develop

a child's conception of the world is different

from an adult's conception because a child

starts with no concept of an external world

contributions from Jean Piaget by creating

Stage Theory

infants will go through different stages

that will end in adult understanding

suggests that a child first becomes

aware of a concept before they can

acquire the words for that concept

Piaget's Theory of Cognitive Development

Sensorimotor (0-2 years old)

child interacts with environment by

manipulation objects

Preoperational (2-7 years old)

child begins to represent the world

symbolically

→ starts association

→ kind of imaginative

→ difficulty grasping abstract concepts

Concrete Operational (7-12 years old)

child begins to mentally operate on

objects

→ logical reasoning for things they can see

→ cause and effect

can tell some abstract concepts (ex.

mass, weight)

Formal Operational (12+ years old)

→ child can think hypothetically

→ use logic to solve problems

Tuesday, 20 September 2022

Rationalist Perspective

→ ideas from Plato and Descartes

→ premise that certain fundamentals are innate

→ language capacity is present from birth

→ nature-based

→ language is innate in humans

→ that's why we can speak and animals can't

Chomsky's Universal Grammar Theory

language acquisition is a process of acquiring

grammar

→ environment is not enough

"poverty of the stimulus" argument

degenerate input

adults do not speak in perfect

grammar

  • stutters, "uhm"

not enough instances

  • children are not exposed enough

Language Acquisition Device

innate structure that monitors the constraints

of rules by language

recognizes correct and incorrect grammar →

Opposition: If it is innate, why does it take so

long for a child to acquire grammar?

Continuous Hypothesis

all parameters are available from

birth, but they cannot be used until

other difficulties have been

overcome

  • meet certain factors first

ex. the child has to comprehend

longer sentences first

Maturation Hypothesis

children do not have immediate

access to all their innate knowledge,

but it becomes available over time

replaced by Universal Grammar Theory

set of parameters that constrain language

acquisition

innate understanding of different

grammars in languages

Social Interactionist Approach

communicative interactions are necessary for

language acquisition

based on Jerome Bruner's Social Learning

Theory

→ language is developed in a "functional aspect"

for you to acquire language, you need to be able

to use it in a social context

→ language happens due to socialization

→ language is for communication

problems with UGT

difficult to find examples of parameters

being clearly set in different languages

grammar rules changes between

languages

how deaf children acquire sign language

spoken parameters also apply to

deaf children

how bilingual children manage to acquire

two languages at the same time

because of these problems, UGT changed to:

grammar plays a role in language

acquisition

Linguistic Universals

features that can be found in most languages

  • all sentences are made up of words

all words can function as verb, subject,

or object

Lenneberg's Critical Period Hypothesis

primary language acquisition must occur

before 12 years old in order for the individual

to have full linguistic competence

language acquisition after the set period will

be slower

it will be hard to learn regardless of how

much the environment teaches you

Wild Boy of Aveyron

  • primary example
  • named "Victor" by Dr. Itard

attempted to start learning language at

the age of 12 years old for 5 years

only learned two words

  • "milk" "omg"

Tuesday, 20 September 2022