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Lecture 8 Language & INTELLIGENCE Lecture 8 Language & INTELLIGENCE

Lecture 8 Language & INTELLIGENCE - PowerPoint Presentation

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Lecture 8 Language & INTELLIGENCE - PPT Presentation

Visiting Assistant PROFESSOR YEESAN TEOH Department of Psychology National Taiwan University Unless noted the course materials are licensed under Creative Commons Attribution ID: 1027041

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1. Lecture 8Language & INTELLIGENCE Visiting Assistant PROFESSOR YEE-SAN TEOHDepartment of PsychologyNational Taiwan University Unless noted, the course materials are licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Taiwan (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0) GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY

2. Language DevelopmentTheoriesAntecedents of language acquisitionVocabularyGrammar

3. The components of language

4. How Do we Acquire Language?

5. Theories of Language acquisition

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8. Differences in language learning

9. Lack of Stimulation – Maltreated childrenThe Story of GenieAbused and never spoken to since birth.Discovered at age 13, given rehabilitation.Was able to use speech much like that of a young child (“Another house have dog”).Never able to reach the proficiency typical for her age.

10. deafnessLanguage does not depend on the auditory-vocal channel.The American Sign Language (ASL) involves a system of gestures.ASL has hand shapes & positions for each word composition. Babies born to deaf ASL users (whether or not they are deaf) can learn from caregivers through informal interaction.

11. blindnessBlind children learn language just as rapidly and as well as sighted children.Vision-related words like “look” and “see” are understood in a different way – use of hands rather than eyes.Color words are learnt even without personally experiencing them – they can talk about the colors of things they are familiar with.

12. Language impairmentsAphasiaDisorder of language produced by lesions in certain areas of the cortex in the left hemisphere.A lesion in Broca’s area = nonfluent aphasia (speech difficulty).A lesion in Wernicke’s area = fluent aphasia (comprehension difficulty)

13. Language impairmentsSpecific Language Impairment (SLI)Syndrome in which individuals are very slow to learn language.Not caused by developmental disorders or brain damage.Throughout life, difficulty in understanding and producing many sentences, even though intelligence seems normal.

14. Second language learningKnowledge of the first or native language is so much better than knowledge of a second or third language.Evidence shows that the brain loci of late-learned languages usually are different from those of the first learned language.The older a person who is learning a second language, the more difficult it is to become fluent in that language.

15. What do differences in language learning tell us?

16. The critical/sensitive period hypothesisThere is a sensitive developmental period for language learning.Language is most easily acquired in early childhood.Evidence for sensitive periods for language acquisition comes from studies of severely maltreated children and second language learning.

17. Babies’ Communicative EffortsLANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT

18. Parents and infants engage in dialogue of sounds, gestures, facial expressions.Infant grows as a communicative partner (Schaffer, 1996).Infant-Directed Speech (also motherese)

19. Gesturing sets the stage for language development…. (Goldin-Meadows, 2007)

20. 6 months - most babies learn to use pointing gesture.End of 1st yr, gestures to communicate, share their intentions with another (Tomasello et al. 2007).ProtodeclarativeGesture intended to make a statement about an object.ProtoimperativeGesture intended to get another person to do something for the child.Using Gestures

21. Beyond Gesturing…..Receptive LanguageExpressive/Productive Language

22. Receptive Language –Early Speech PerceptionAs early as 1 month of age, infants can perform categorical speech perception.Ability to discriminate speech sounds, e.g. consonants.Exposure to specific or native languages determines ability to distinguish and categorize specific sounds/phonemes.

23. Discriminating between languages4-day-old babies in France & America can discriminate between English and French speech.By 2 months, babies listen longer when their own native language is spoken.

24. Tuning in to one’s own language….Infants lose the ability to make phoneme distinctions that are NOT used in their language community.Japanese infants stop distinguishing between “la” and “ra”.Babies begin to listen specifically for the particulars of their own language.

25. Productive Language – Early Speech ProductionProduction of sounds in 1st yr follows orderly 4-stage sequence.Crying  Cooing  Babbling  Patterned Speech.Cultural differences in prespeech sounds emerge around the babbling stage.Babies start to tune in to the specific sounds of their native language.

26. How Children Acquire WordsDifferent views on how children associate a word with an object.Associations combined with attention to perceptual similarity. Use of social cues from adults to learn what a word labels.Use of multiple cues that changes with age – perceptual at early stage, social later.

27. How Children Acquire GrammarBy 2yrs of age, children begin to use 2-word utterances (Telegraphic Speech/TS). E.g. ‘there book’, ‘more milk’TS includes crucial words needed to convey the speaker’s intent.From 2 yrs onwards, children learn the rules of grammar – understanding and acquiring morphemes (-s, -ing)

28. Grammatical Flowering (deVilliers & deVilliers, 1992).In 3rd year of life…..Sentence construction improves.Increasing types of verbs, and tenses.Ability to pose questions, using wh- words (what, which, where, why).Expressions of negation (e.g. “That not daddy”, “No go school”).

29. Language DevelopmentThe Social Use of LanguageBilingualism

30. The components of language

31. Using language sociallyChildren use language as a social tool through….Speech Acts = Expressions clearly referring to situations rather than to one object/action.Discourse = Socially based conversation where children listen and respond to another’s speech.

32. The Rules of Pragmatics – Using Language Appropriate To A Given SituationEngage attention of listener.Be sensitive to listener’s feedback and respond clearly.Adjust speech to the characteristics of the listener (e.g. age, culture, social background).Adjust speech to suit situation (e.g. church)Learn to listen.Evaluate own and conversational partner’s messages.

33. How Early Do Children Learn the Pragmatics of Language?

34. Making conversation at 2yrs2-year-olds…Addressed listeners during interactionDirected communication to others when they could see each other.Made close contact to topic/object of conversation.Responsive to feedback.(Wellman & Lempers, 1977)

35. Adjusting speech 2-3-yr-olds used more repetitions and more attention-eliciting words (hello, look) when talking to baby siblings than to mothers.(Judy Dunn & colleagues)

36. Children’s Limitations…Less effective speakers when they must compete with other adults or children.Less competent when speaking about Absent objectsFeelings Thoughts Relationships

37. Learning to listenEven 3-yr-olds can recognize ambiguous messages and respond appropriately.Revelle et al (1985)When 3- and 4-year-olds heard ambiguous requests (e.g. Bring me the refrigerator)….Many understood that request was problematic and requested more information (e.g. How? It is too heavy)

38. Bilingualism / MultilingualismLANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT

39. A few consequences of bilingualism…Learning of each language may be slower, vocabularies of each language smaller.Can use distinct sounds from each language to deal with cognitive load from learning two languages.Skillfulness in 2 languages – better concept formation, flexible thinking.

40. Crib bilingualism…Bilingual exposure in early infancy enhances the ability to monitor and switch between competing tasks.Having to inhibit knowledge about one language while learning another language promotes executive control.Better cognitive flexibility and executive control – better ability to monitor, repair, and reinterpret sentences.

41. INTELLIGENCE

42. Types of intelligenceFluidAbility to deal with new and unusual problems, likely to be a fast learner.Decreases with age.More susceptible to bodily changes.CrystallizedIndividual’s acquired knowledge; useful for dealing with problems that are similar to those already encountered.Increases with age.

43. Sternberg’s Triarchic Theory of Intelligence3 major components –Information-processing skills: Encode, store, and retrieve info.Experience with given task: Exposure & practice with particular intelligence task.Ability to adapt to demands of context: Adapt to requirements, select situation to meet abilities & needs.

44. Sternberg’s Theory of Successful IntelligenceAbility to meet own goals and those of his/her society.3 abilities:Analytical: reasoning about best answer to a question.Creative: devising new ways of addressing issues and concerns.Practical: skills used in work, family life, social/professional interactions.

45. Gardner’s Theory of Multiple Intelligence8 kinds of intelligence:Linguistic (e.g. poet, teacher)Logical-Mathematical (e.g. scientist)Spatial (e.g. engineer, artist)Musical (e.g. musician, composer)Bodily-Kinesthetic (e.g. dancer, athlete)Intrapersonal (e.g. novelist, actor)Interpersonal (e.g. psychotherapist)Naturalistic (e.g. biologist)

46. Application to formal education?Gardner & Sternberg’s Project Zero Practical Intelligence for School Program (PIFS) Positive effects on motivation, achievement, behavior.

47. PIFSStudents work through lessons that develop their understanding of their own strengths and interests; The purposes of various school tasks (why is there homework and how is it similar to what adults do?); The demands of different subject areas (how is studying for a math test different from studying for social studies?); The many steps involved in school tasks (such as making plans and using resources); and The importance of self-monitoring through reflection (in journals and discussions).

48. Intelligence TestingIQ (Intelligence Quotient) Index of a way a person performs on a standardized intelligence test relative to the way others of the same age perform.

49. Why Do We Need To Measure Intelligence?

50. Flanagan & Harrison, 2005Predict academic performancePredict performance on the jobAssess general adjustment & healthProblem with IQ Test Questions…Are they accurate?Are they culturally sensitive?

51. Existing Intelligence TestsInfantsBayley Scales of Infant DevelopmentFagan Test of Infant IntelligencePrimarily used to identify abnormal development, determine child’s need for early intervention services.

52. Older childrenStanford-Binet TestWeschler Intelligence Scale for ChildrenSkills tested in WISC include factual knowledge, long-term memory, short-term memory, reasoning, mathematical skills.

53. AdultsStanford-Binet TestWeschler Adult Intelligence Scales (WAIS)Skills tested in the WAIS include verbal comprehension, perceptual reasoning, working memory, processing speed.

54. What influences intelligence?

55. Individual Differences in IntelligenceHeritability RatiosProportion of variance in intelligence in a given population that is attributable to genetic factors.Estimates of 40%-70%.Differences in heritability – some cultures or socio-economic backgrounds facilitate/impede the expression of ‘intelligence’ genes.

56. Culture & intelligenceCultures may differ on conceptions of what intelligence is.Different cultures use different methods of problem solving.Cultures differ in the skills they need and value.

57. Poverty & iq developmentChildren who live in poverty in their preschool years seem more at risk than children who were not exposed to such levels of poverty until middle or late childhood.Genetic factors are more significant in high-SES than low-SES families.Impoverished environment cuts off genetic potential – so genetic blueprint matters less.

58. The flynn effectIQ scores seem to be rising at the rate of approx 3 points per decade.Why?Improvement in nutrition and health care.Interaction among cultures – sharing ‘intelligence’Genetics less significant – evolution takes much longer.