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Language and Perception Ling 411 – 17. Perception: Starting view  Perception is a bottom-up process From primary perceptual area upwards  E.g. primary.

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Presentation on theme: "Language and Perception Ling 411 – 17. Perception: Starting view  Perception is a bottom-up process From primary perceptual area upwards  E.g. primary."— Presentation transcript:

1 Language and Perception Ling 411 – 17

2 Perception: Starting view  Perception is a bottom-up process From primary perceptual area upwards  E.g. primary auditory, for auditory perception  Takes place in a single perceptual area E.g. auditory cortex for auditory perception  Works by processing input to the sense organ E.g. auditory input for auditory perception  Each of these points is wrong!

3 The McGurk Effect  Acoustic syllable [ba] presented to subjects  with visual presentation of articulatory gestures for [ga]  Subjects typically heard [da] or [ga]  “Evidence has accumulated that visual speech modifies activity in the auditory cortex, even in the primary auditory cortex.” Mikko Sams (2006) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aFPtc8BVdJk How does it work? (1)Visual input (2)Top-down processing

4 Perception – Refining a simple-minded view 1. It is not confined to a single perceptual modality The McGurk effect  Auditory perception affected by visual input Conceptual structure affects auditory perception  The influence of context on speech perception

5 Perception – Refining a simple-minded view 1. Not confined to a single perceptual modality The McGurk effect  Visual input affects auditory perception Conceptual structure affects auditory perception 2. Not just bottom-up Top-down processing fills in unsensed details 3. Not even confined to posterior cortex Can also use motor neurons  Experiment: left hand or right hand?  Mirror neurons

6 Top-down processing in perception T CUP MADE OF GLASS CERAMICSHORT HAS HANDLE Properties Conceptual and perceptual information Node for CUP in conceptual area for drinking vessels Visual properties are in occipital and lower temporal areas

7 Bidirectional processing and inference T CUP MADE OF GLASS CERAMIC SHORT HANDLE These connections are bidirectional

8 Pertinent neuroanatomical findings: Bidirectional Processing  An established fact of neuroanatomy: A connection from point A to point B in the cortex is generally accompanied by a connection from point B to point A  Separate fibers (axons): (1) A to B, (2) B to A  In short, cortico-cortical connections are generally bidirectional

9 Bidirectional processing: reciprocal links excitatory inhibitory

10 Bidirectional processing and inference T CUP SHORT HANDLE Thought process: 1. The cardinal concept node is activated by a subset of its property nodes 2. Feed-backward processing activates other property nodes Consequence: We “apprehend” properties that are not actually present in the sensory input

11 Bidirectional processing and inference T CUP MADE OF GLASS CERAMIC SHORT HANDLE These connections are bidirectional Separate fibers for the two directions; shown as one line in the notation

12 Cortical Structure and Inference: Perceiving things that are not in the input T Category Properties A B F E Consequence: If A and B, then E and F C D

13 Examples  Looks like a duck Probably quacks  Ceramic, cup-shaped, handle Probably holds coffee (without breaking)  Dark clouds, thunder It’s going to rain  ATM Probably has money

14 Perception depends mainly on cortical structures already present before sensory input “Perception is hallucination constrained by sensory data” Shepherd

15 A terminological problem  We need to distinguish Perception narrowly conceived  The basic process of recognition  Single perceptual modality  Bottom-up processing  No motor involvement Perception broadly conceived  Two different terms needed Recognition (a.k.a. ‘microperception’)  Bottom-up process in a single perceptual modality Perception (the broad conception) (a.k.a. ‘macroperception’)

16 “Micro-perception” and “macro-perception”  Microperception and macroperception  Microperception A.k.a. recognition The local process of integrating features Performed in one perceptual modality Bottom-up  Macroperception The overall process of perception Uses multiple modalities Uses top-down processing

17 Perception – Refining a simple-minded view 1. Not just bottom-up Top-down processing fills in unsensed details 2. Not confined to a single perceptual modality The McGurk effect  Visual input affects auditory perception Conceptual structure affects auditory perception 3. Not even confined to posterior cortex Can also use motor neurons  Experiment: left hand or right hand?  Mirror neurons

18 Left hand or right hand?

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22 Left or right hand?  Imaging experiment  Subjects were shown pictures of one hand  Asked to identify: left or right  Functional imaging showed increased CBF in hand area of motor cortex Peter Fox, ca. 2000

23 Motor structures in perception  The left-hand vs. right-hand experiment  ‘Mirror neurons’ in motor cortex  Articulation as aid to phonological perception  Articulation in reading  Motor activity in listening to music  Watching an athletic event

24 Mirror Neurons  NY Times: “One mystery remains: What makes them so smart?” (Jan. 10, 2006)  Answer: They are not smart in themselves Their apparent smartness is a result of their position: at top of a hierarchy Compare:  The general of an army  The head of a business  Similarly, high-level conceptual nodes The “grandmother node”

25 Mirror Neurons  What makes mirror neurons appear to be special? Ans.: They receive input from visual perception The superior longitudinal fasciculus  Connects visual perception to motor areas  How can a motor neuron receive perceptual input? Motor neurons are supposed to operate top-down Answer: bidirectional processing  They also receive perceptual information Bottom-up processing

26 Superior Longitudinal Fasciculus From O. D. Creutzfeldt, Cortex Cerebri (1995)

27 Are some neurons “smarter” than others?  Claim: A grandmother node would have to be very smart Identifies very complex object Even in many varieties  Alternative: the head of a hierarchy It is the hierarchy as a whole that has those ‘smarts’ Similarly, mirror neurons  They get visual input since they are connected to visual areas Superior longitudinal fasciculus

28 Implications of hierarchical organization  Nodes at a high level in a hierarchy may give the appearance of being very “smart”  This appearance is a consequence of their position — at top of hierarchy  As the top node in a hierarchy, a node has the processing power of the whole hierarchy Grandmother nodes Mirror neurons Compare:  The general of an army  The head of a business organization

29 Multi-Modal Perception 1. Perception is not just bottom-up Top-down processing fills in unsensed details 2. It is not confined to a single perceptual modality The McGurk effect  Visual input affects auditory perception Conceptual structure affects auditory perception 3. It is not even confined to posterior cortex Can also use motor neurons  Motor activation in speech perception  Mirror neurons

30 Perceptual structures in motor production  Perceptual structure is used in two ways 1. Planning (e.g. visualizing while painting) 2. Monitoring  Examples Phonological recognition in speech production  Cf. Wernicke’s aphasia Painting Musical production Baseball, soccer, tennis, etc.

31 The Influence of language on non-linguistic perception  As we have seen, non-speech input affects phonological perception  It is also the case that language affects non-linguistic perception E.g., visual perception

32 Language and (Visual) Perception PhonologicalPhonological Object ProductionPerception Categories Vision Language N.B.: These connections are bidirectional

33 Recent experiments of Kay et al.  Experiments at UC Berkeley Color perception: do differences in color naming across languages influence color perception?  Main finding: Lateralized influence of language on perception Response time faster for between-category discrimination – especially for RVF presentation A left hemisphere (RVF) phenomenon green blue

34 Perception: A simple-minded view, revisited  Perception is a bottom-up process From primary perceptual area upwards  E.g. primary auditory, for auditory perception  Takes place in a single perceptual area E.g. auditory cortex for auditory perception  Works by processing input to the sense organ E.g. auditory input for auditory perception  Each of these points in wrong

35 Another hypothesis of Whorf  Grammatical categories of a language influence the thinking of people who speak the language  Can we explain this too in terms of brain structure?

36 Mechanisms of operation 1. Entrenchment Strengthening of connections through repeated activation  An automatic brain process  Important in learning 2. Reverberation of activation 3. Priming 4. Language as a major means of learning conceptual and perceptual distinctions

37 Entrenchment and thinking: a mechanism  Connections become stronger with use (entrenchment)  Grammatical categories make speakers constantly heed selected phenomena  Connections for phenomena which speakers must constantly heed.. Will be repeatedly traversed Therefore will get progressively stronger

38 Example: Grammatical gender  Does talking about inanimate objects as if they were masculine or feminine actually lead people to think of inanimate objects as having a gender?  Could the grammatical genders assigned to objects by a language influence people’s mental representation of objects? Boroditsky (2003)

39 Plausibility of the possibility  Children learning to speak a language with grammatical gender may suppose that gender indicates a meaningful distinction between types of objects  Other grammatical distinctions do reflect actual perceptual differences: singular:plural

40 Children learning a language with gender  “For all they know, the grammatical genders assigned by their language are the true universal genders of objects.” Boroditsky et al, 2003

41 Experiment: Gender and Associations (Boroditsky et al. 2002)  Subjects: speakers of Spanish or German All were fluent also in English English used as language of experiment  Task: Write down the 1 st 3 adjectives that come to mind to describe each object All the (24) objects have opposite gender in German and Spanish  Raters of adjectives: Native English speakers

42 Examples:  Key (masc in German, fem in Spanish) Adjectives used by German speakers:  Hard, heavy, jagged, metal, serrated, useful Adjectives used by Spanish speakers:  Golden, intricate, little, lovely, shiny, tiny  Bridge (fem in German, masc in spanish) Adjectives used by German speakers:  Beautiful, elegant, fragile, peaceful, pretty Adjectives used by Spanish speakers:  Big, dangerous, long, strong, sturdy, towering

43 Results of the Experiment (Boroditsky et al. 2002)  Raters of adjectives were native English speakers  Result: Adjectives were rated as masculine or feminine in agreement with the gender in subject’s native language

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