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NATURE OR NURTURE? First language acquisition theories

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NATURE OR NURTURE?. First language acquisition theories. Behaviourism. Watson, Pavlov and Skinner Tabula rasa Focus on observable behaviour role of the environment Imitation and practice. Pavlov and classical conditioning. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: NATURE OR NURTURE?

NATURE OR NURTURE?

First language acquisition theories

Page 2: NATURE OR NURTURE?

Behaviourism

Watson, Pavlov and SkinnerTabula rasaFocus on

observable behaviour role of the environment

Imitation and practice

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Pavlov and classical conditioning

Developing unconditioned responses through stimulus–response-reinforcement

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Skinner: operant conditioning

We are goverened by the consequences of our actions

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Behaviouristic pedagogy

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Objections 1. "What children say"

Jean Berko (1958): wug-wugs, gling-glinged-glangwented, taked, mices, mouses, sheepsett, kenyért, lót, tégem> Analogous thinking

2. "What children don't say"McNeill (1966):CHILD: Nobody don't like me.MUM: No, say "nobody likes me". CHILD: Nobody don't like me. (eight repetitions of this dialogue)MUM: No, now listen carefully, say "nobody likes me". CHILD: Oh! Nobody don't likes me. > Inability to imitate

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Nativism/Innatism

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Chomsky: genetic pre-programming

Based on

1. the Argument from the Poverty of the Stimulus

2. evidence of rule governed language generation

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LAD, language universals

Example: SVO components in sentences

- 75% of the world's languages: SVO (English, French, Vietnamese) or SOV (Japanese, Tibetan, Korean)

- 10 - 15% VSO ( Welsh) or VOS (Malagasy)- 10-15% free word order (Latin, Hungarian),

but SOV common: Márta tortát evett.

„Setting the parameters” – matching UG to particular language

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Functionalism

Focus on imput: Interaction vs. exposure Bruner’s Language Acquisition Support System

(LASS)- parents communicate in ritualistic scenarios- easily comprehensible and predictable language- emotionally charged situations- repetition of acts and language

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Motherese, parentese (interaction, initiation, response)

1. Simplified in grammar and meaning 2. Shorter sentences - about 4-8 words/

sentence, when speaking to 2-year olds 3. More restricted range of sentence patterns 4. Expansion and repetition of sentences

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5. Slower speech 6. Use of special words and sounds 7. High pitch 8. High, rising intonation - looking for feedback. 9. Embedded in the here and now.

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Findings from motherese

Not so partial and ungrammatical as suggested byChomsky a large number of WH forms

However No close correlation between motherese and

child speech

Not all social groups adapt speech to young children

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Children do not simply repeat the language they hear from their caretakers.

They also produce utterances that they have never heard. Eszel tégem?Mummy sock.

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Motherese: focus on meaning, not on grammar

Child : Mamma isn't boy, he a girl. Mother : That's right. Child : And Walt Disney comes on

Tuesday. Mother : No he does not.

Children’s mistakes not random errors - own grammar.

INTERLANGUAGE

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Negation sequence of English-speaking children

1. No and Not appear as single word sentences. 2. Two-word (pivot) sentences: No car, Not gone3. Negative words used within constructions:

You no do that, Mummy 4. Negative auxiliaries appear: Won't, can't5. Not replaces no. Double negatives 6. Any, hardly, scarcely during early years of school.

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Connectionism

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Focus on neuro-programming: neurons, synapses, wiring, circuits

Where does language reside in the brain? Is there a LAD?

Answer from neurology- Lateralisation- Left hemisphere:language and logical functions

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Aphasia studies

Paul Broca 1861: „Tan” Broca’s aphasia: inability to form correct

sentences, patient is aware of difficulty Broca’s area: responsible for grammatical

structuring

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Carl Wernicke, 1874: Wernicke’s area Wernicke’s aphasia: grammatical correctness,

semantically meaningless utterances, unaware of problem

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Relation between Broca’s and Wernicke’s areas

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Phases of development

Before birth: neurons, wiring for life functions

0/1: "biological exhuberance„neurons connect in response to environmental impulsesLanguage: - vocal map of L1 is formed

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1/10: flexible synapses, easily formedLanguage: - sensorimotor connections flexible (no accent!) - vocab.learnt through repeated exposure and interaction

After 10: "pruning"Language: fixed synapses

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GENETICALLY PROVIDED BRAIN POTENTIAL

RICH ENVIRONMENT

RICH BRAIN "Experts now agree that a baby does not come into the world as a genetically preprogrammed automaton or a blank slate at the mercy of the environment ... Learning happens by the interaction of the genes and the environment.„ (S. Begley)

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Critical period in FLA: - no hope after CP

Critical period in SLL/SLA:- weak version: difficult- strong version: impossible

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Alternative considerations and counterevidenceLeft/Right cooperation in SLL

strategies of acquisition guessing meaning formulaic utterances

Hill (1970), Sorenson (1967): multilingual tribes, no accent

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Areas of change

Neurological Pruning Lateralisation

Psychomotor Accent

Cognitive Concrete Formal thinking

Affective Inhibition Motivation

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Personality factors

Talent: neurological flexibility New wiring for L2 Talent cluster

Motivation, + attitude, involvement

Strategies Active

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Conclusion

Language learning, a unique human capacity: neurological basis

Genetic programme + environmentLearning capacity limited by time (CPH)

Loss of unconnected neurons and unused synapses

Also influenced by personality factors