Language, Mind, and Brain by Ewa Dabrowska Chapter 6: Biological underpinnings.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 3 Culture.
Advertisements

Higher Order Thoughts Zoltán Dienes, Conscious and unconscious mental processes, 2006 David Rosenthal.
First, Scale Up to the Robotic Turing Test, Then Worry About Feeling.
Module 14 Thought & Language.
Evolutionary Psychology and the Modular Mind James A. Van Slyke.
Introduction: The Chomskian Perspective on Language Study.
Chapter 15: Johnson, M. H. The human social brain: An “evo- devo” perspective (pp ). The role of ontogeny in the evolution of the human brain.
Language, Mind, and Brain by Ewa Dabrowska Chapter 10: The cognitive enterprise.
Biological and cultural foundations of human language: Insights from computer simulations Nick Chater Division of Psychology and Language Sciences UCL.
Can a machine be conscious? (How?) Depends what we mean by “machine? man-made devices? toasters? ovens? cars? computers? today’s robots? "Almost certainly.
Psych 56L/ Ling 51: Acquisition of Language Lecture 8 Phonological Development III.
Introduction to Cognitive Science Lecture #1 : INTRODUCTION Joe Lau Philosophy HKU.
Green’s Tri-Level Hypothesis Behavioral: a person’s performance on specific experimental tasks Cognitive: the postulated cognitive or affective systems.
Language, Mind, and Brain by Ewa Dabrowska Chapter 3: Language acquisition: robustness.
Chapter Four The Cognitive Approach I: History, Vision, and Attention.
Contemporary Perspectives. What is a “perspective”? What do you think???
Introduction to Psychology Suzy Scherf Lecture 1: Introduction The Science of Psychology Thinking Critically in Psychology Evaluating the SSSM.
Nora Davies. Evolution successfully explains the origins of life. It is the foundation of biology and is a building block for whole new types of agricultural,
Introduction.  Evolutionary psychology is the scientific study of human nature based on understanding the psychological adaptations humans evolved to.
Main Branches of Linguistics
What is Psychology? chapter 1. Overview The science of psychology What psychologists do chapter 1.
Chapter 1 Invitation to Biology Hsueh-Fen Juan 阮雪芬 Sep. 11, 2012.
Descartes I am essentially rational, only accidentally an animal ‘essentially’ = logically necessarily ‘essentially’ = logically necessarily Strictly speaking,
Language, Mind, and Brain by Ewa Dabrowska Chapter 7: Words.
Psych 56L/ Ling 51: Acquisition of Language Lecture 8 Phonological Development III.
1 PSYC 3640 Psychological Studies of Language Language Theories November 20, 2007.
Psyc311 – Development Psychology Chapter 01 Introduction to Developmental Science Theory & Research Methods.
INFANCY Cognitive and Language Development. Cognitive Development.
Lecture 2 The Origins of Language 9/19/ The origins of language A famous quote from Charles Darwin (1871) “The suspicion does not appear improbable.
Evolution of Universal Grammar Pia Göser Universität Tübingen Seminar: Sprachevolution Dozent: Prof. Jäger
Gardenfors, P. (2003). The dawn of language. In How homo became sapiens: on the evolution of thinking (pp. 141–165). New York: Oxford University Press.
Perception CHAPTER THREE. Example: Bottled Water.
Simulated Evolution of Language By: Jared Shane I400: Artificial Life as an approach to Artificial Intelligence January 29, 2007.
Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Chapter 1 Introduction and History of Psychology.
Classical Rationalism The fundamental source of knowledge is reason. Knowledge should be of the essential properties of things. Such knowledge is knowledge.
By Alice Omaggio Hadley
1. Describe how Kanzi’s communication skills fulfill each of the four critical properties of language. Kanzi used symbols to represent objects and actions.
Evolutionary Psychology (EP) The evolutionary biology of mind, brain and behavior. Synthesis of: evolutionary biology biological anthropology psychology.
Aaron Lukaszewski Lindsey Stevenson Hutson Olsen
Human Nature and Culture: What is the Human Mind Designed For? Roy F. Baumeister.
APPROACHES The Behaviourist Approach: o Psychology should be the study of observational behaviour in a scientific way. o All human behaviour is learnt.
Meta-representation The Emergence of meta-representation (a hypothesis)
Perspectives Of Psychology. Biological Perspective Emphasizes physical causes of behavior Look for connections between events in the brain and behavior/mental.
Approaches to Psychology Historical Approaches. Structuralism William Wundt ( ) William Wundt ( ) Study of human behavior in a systematic.
Module 15 Evolutionary Psychology UNIT 3 BIOLOGY.
Thinking About Psychology: The Science of Mind and Behavior Charles T. Blair-Broeker Randal M. Ernst.
Chapter 3 Behavior Analysis A description of the essential features of behavior analysis as a natural science approach to development.
1. Central issues For both experimental and modeling field it is important to start from theory A common theory (and a common lexicon) will help building.
Competing Conceptions of Language Dr. Douglas Fleming University of Ottawa.
Language. Human Language  Can be divided into two types:  Natural Language – Language we learn to speak from an early age  Constructed language – Languages.
Branches of Linguistics
Thinking About Psychology: The Science of Mind and Behavior Charles T. Blair-Broeker Randal M. Ernst.
Language, Mind, and Brain by Ewa Dabrowska
Introduction to Contemporary Linguistics
The Gene’s-Eye View of Life
The Standard Social Science Model (SSSM)
Language, Mind, and Brain by Ewa Dabrowska
Today Review: “Knowing a Language” Complete chapter 1
The Gene’s-Eye View of Life
LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT.
Warm Up Describe Each: Natural Selection Population Genetics
Discovering psychology
Thinking & Language (Chapter 10)
Biological & Cognitive Approaches revision.
Approaches to Psychology
Learning to Communicate
The objectives of study
Unit 3 Biological Bases of Behavior
Ch 1.2.
Presentation transcript:

Language, Mind, and Brain by Ewa Dabrowska Chapter 6: Biological underpinnings

1. A genetically specified language module? Q: What are the are arguments against a language module in the brain?

1. A genetically specified language module? Q: What are the are arguments against a language module in the brain? A: No one can find this language module; human brains are not essentially different from ape brains; there aren’t enough genes to fully determine wiring; brains are plastic.

2. Human adaptations to language 2.1 Preadaptations included: –Increase in brain size (until 300K years ago) –Changes in upper respiratory tract, facilitating articulation of sounds

2.2 Cultural learning and mind- reading “Cumulative cultural evolution is a necessary condition for language” Tomasello argues that only humans have this capacity because only humans can understand a goal and learn by imitation.

2.3 Cortical control… Q: How do human vocalizations differ from those of animals?

2.3 Cortical control… Q: How do human vocalizations differ from those of animals? A: Rather than merely responding to psychological states, we can consciously control our vocalizations. Also, we can package actions in sequences, which facilitates syntax.

3. Language adaptations to humans Q: What is convergent evolution?

3. Language adaptations to humans Q: What is convergent evolution? A: The spontaneous and independent evolution of similar features in language, given the biases of human perception and cognition –“languages independently come to resemble each other, not in detail, but in terms of certain general structural properties”

3. Language adaptations to humans Q: What do we know about absolute universals?

3. Language adaptations to humans Q: What do we know about absolute universals? A: They are hard to find and uninteresting. Cross-linguistic patterns are more interesting and explainable due to things like pressures of processing, discourse, and general preference for iconic structures.

4.1 Problems with poverty-of- stimulus argument Q: What does Universal Grammar assume?

4.1 Problems with poverty-of- stimulus argument Q: What does Universal Grammar assume? A: Human language has certain universal properties that cannot be learned because children do not have access to sufficient input.

4.1 Problems with poverty-of- stimulus argument Q: What is wrong with these assumptions?

4.1 Problems with poverty-of- stimulus argument Q: What is wrong with these assumptions? A: They are just that – assumptions, and often do not hold up to empirical study. The stimulus is not impoverished, and there are things not in UG that have to be learned too…

5. Conclusions Language is an evolutionary late- comer that piggybacks on structures evolved for other purposes. A theory of language should minimize postulations of language-specific adaptations.