Linguistic Anthropology Bringing Back the Brain. What Bloomfield Got “Right” Emphasized spoken language rather than written language The role of the linguist.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 7 Ruben & Stewart (2006). Message Production Every aspect of our behavior (language, tone of voice, appearance, eye contact, actions, use of space.
Advertisements

Intro to Linguistics Class # 2 Chapter 1: What is Language?
Prescriptive vs. Descriptive
© 2001 Laura Snodgrass, Ph.D.1 Language Psycholinguistics –study of mental processes and structures that underlie our ability to produce and comprehend.
Main points of Interlanguage, Krashen, and Universal Grammar
Introduction: The Chomskian Perspective on Language Study.
Nativism: Noam Chomsky
Cognitive Processes PSY 334 Chapter 11 – Language Structure.
Introduction to Linguistics and Basic Terms
August 23, 2010 Grammars and Lexicons How do linguists study grammar?
What is Syntax?  The rules that govern the structure of utterances; also called grammar  The basic organization of sentences is around syntax  build.
Language Development Major Questions: 1) What is language/what is involved in language? 2) What are the stages of language development? 3) Is language.
Topic: Theoretical Bases for Cognitive Method Objectives Trainees will be able to give reasons for the design and procedures of the Cognitive Method.
Grammar and Grammars Dialects of Native Speakers.
Key Attributes of Human Language This PP presentation uses several graphics and examples from similar material created by Dr. Alicia Wassink, University.
FIRST LANGUAGE ACQUISTION Applied Linguistics University of Huelva.
TRANSFORMATIONAL GRAMMAR An introduction. LINGUISTICS Linguistics Traditional Before 1930 Structural 40s -50s Transformational ((Chomsky 1957.
Syntax and Semantics Dr. Walid Amer, Associate Professor of linguistics The Islamic university of Gaza February, 2009.
Generative Grammar(Part ii)
TOPIC 2: Some Basic Concepts
The Langue/Parole distinction`
“Language is … to be considered in two contexts: on the one hand, human system of conceptualization and perception, and on the other, the actual use of.
Weakness of Structural linguistics Functionalism
EFL Anthony’s model: Approach Method Technique
Introduction There are three major scientific research methods that are used to study the theories of Second Language Acquisition (SLA). These three methods.
X Language Acquisition
Theories of First Language Acquisition
Cognitive Development: Language Infants and children face an especially important developmental task with the acquisition of language.
1 LIN 1310B Introduction to Linguistics Prof: Nikolay Slavkov TA: Qinghua Tang Acknowledgements: Many of the slides for this course are based on Eta Schneiderman’s.
Language Development Module 17. Module Overview Building Blocks of Language Language Acquisition Language Stages Click on the any of the above hyperlinks.
The Communicative Language Teaching Lecture # 18.
Theories of First Language Acquisition
Linguistic approach to language study
Language, Thought and Culture March 7, 2005 What do we know? Voice No. 1 Voice No. 2 Voice No. 3 Voice No. 4 Voice No. 5 Voice No. 6.
Language  Language  our spoken, written, or gestured works and the way we combine them to communicate meaning  Phoneme  in a spoken language, the smallest.
Levels of Language 6 Levels of Language. Levels of Language Aspect of language are often referred to as 'language levels'. To look carefully at language.
Universal Grammar Noam Chomsky.
Theories of first language acquisition.  We are not born speaking!  Language must be acquired. ◦ Learning vs. acquisition  If we think of all that.
Chomsky vs. Skinner. Skinner, a behavioural psychologist any acquisition was due to a learning process involving the shaping of grammar into a correct.
First Language Acquisition
PSY270 Michaela Porubanova. Language  a system of communication using sounds or symbols that enables us to express our feelings, thoughts, ideas, and.
Cognitive Processes PSY 334 Chapter 11 – Language Structure June 2, 2003.
Formal Approaches to Second Language Acquisition Michelle Samoray ELS Language Centers
Lecture 1 Lec. Maha Alwasidi. Branches of Linguistics There are two main branches: Theoretical linguistics and applied linguistics Theoretical linguistics.
Chapter One What is language? What is it we know about language?
SYNTAX.
Warm Up- pg What is cognition?
Miss. Mona AL-Kahtano. The proponent of this theory: Chomsky When: ( ) Basic assumption: Humans has a specific, innate capacity for languages.
What is Linguistics? «… window to understanding the brain» Pinker. S.( 2012)  Linguistics studies the language(s) – The way how language works language.
Syntax By WJQ. Syntax : Syntax is the study of the rules governing the way words are combined to form sentences in a language, or simply, the study of.
Linguistics and Language Technologies Lori Levin : Grammars and Lexicons Fall Term 2003.
Cognition  Refers to the way in which information is processed and manipulated in remembering, thinking, and knowing.  Includes: Memory, Thinking, and.
Linguistic Anthropology
MENTAL GRAMMAR Language and mind. First half of 20 th cent. – What the main goal of linguistics should be? Behaviorism – Bloomfield: goal of linguistics.
Theories of language acquisition
Chapter 10 Language acquisition Language acquisition----refers to the child’s acquisition of his mother tongue, i.e. how the child comes to understand.
Grammar and Meaning Lecture 1 History of grammar, two phases: Millennia BC up to 1957 and from present day. 1.
LANE 622 APPLIED LINGUISTICS
PSYC 206 Lifespan Development Bilge Yagmurlu.
Linguistics Linguistics can be defined as the scientific or systematic study of language. It is a science in the sense that it scientifically studies the.
Syntax 1 Introduction.
College of Education for Girls Dr. Mohamed Younis Mohamed
Lecture # 30 Review of lectures 8-14.
INTRODUCTION TO LINGUISTICS 1
What is linguistics?.
Transformational & Generative Grammar
Language.
Competence and performance
Linguistic Anthropology
Traditional Grammar VS. Generative Grammar
Presentation transcript:

Linguistic Anthropology Bringing Back the Brain

What Bloomfield Got “Right” Emphasized spoken language rather than written language The role of the linguist is to be a non-manipulating observer Linguistics is descriptive rather than prescriptive or normative

What Bloomfield Got “Right” Linguistic structures must be explicitly formulated without appeal to the intuitions of speakers Linguistics must explain language in ways that are complete i.e., in ways that a non-native speaker can also apply

English grammar rule: the subject and the predicate must agree in person and number. E1 There was an attempt made by the students to limit the amount they were required to read. E2 There were attempts made by the students to limit the amount they were required to read. The subject of both sentences is “there”. But the verb forms differ…

An English language speaker knows that the following are unacceptable: E1 *There were an attempt made by the students to limit the amount they were required to read. E2 *There was attempts made by the students to limit the amount they were required to read. A traditional grammar would state that we are dealing with an EXCEPTION

E5 (a) An attempt was made by the students to limit the amount they were required to read. (b) Attempts were made by the students to limit the amount they were required to read. E6 (a) *An attempt were made by the students to limit the amount they were required to read. (b) *Attempts was made by the students to limit the amount they were required to read.

What Bloomfield Got “Right” The relationships between these sentences is not random  Thus, the proper use of the English grammar rule that the subject and the predicate must agree in person and number…  …depends upon a native speaker’s intuitions and knowledge of English  The grammar rule above is not complete

What Bloomfield Got “Wrong” StimulusResponse “the black box”

Jack and Jill Take a Walk And Jill sees a apple in a tree… She can go to the tree and pick it herself Stimulus Response (thirst) (pick) or she can make “a noise with her larnyx, tongue, and lips” from Bloomfield, Leonard, Language, 1933, p. 23.

Jill Speaks StimulusResponse Jack, would you be a dear and fetch me an apple? Jack goes to the tree and picks an apple for Jill. r... s But Jill could have also said: Those apples sure do look tasty… I’m starving! Do you remember the story of Adam and Eve? Apples are my favorite! speech (form) substitutes for non-speech (meaning) these utterances may all lead to the same response, but they do not all mean the same thing!

So… the meaning of a linguistic form (stimulus) is not the same as the activity (response) it provokes Important things are happening in the black box!

Colorless green ideas sleep furiously. And consider this

Noam Chomsky Works on developing a computer system for translating human languages Syntax vs. semantics Human language is creative ( )

Noam Chomsky A hearer-speaker can produce and interpret an infinite set of utterances using only a limited set of grammar rules and lexical terms A formal grammar of a language can account for this creativity

Noam Chomsky If you expose a child and a kitten to the exact same stimuli Only the child will learn to understand and produce language Humans have a “language acquisition device” (LAD)

Noam Chomsky Linguists should study this LAD and determine how it constrains the range of possible human languages The product: a Universal Grammar (UG)

Child Language Acquisition Occurs very rapidly Follows similar steps throughout the world Stereotypical errors Must involve innate brain mechanisms

Noam Chomsky Generative Grammar Using only a few inputs A child develops a model of the proper ways to use language

Noam Chomsky Distinguishes between linguistic Competence Performance

What’s Still Missing? Semantics – the study of meaning Pragmatics – the study of context Culture!