Psycholinguistics and Its Theories PDF
Psycholinguistics and Its Theories PDF
Psycholinguistics and Its Theories PDF
How to perceive words and store them in the mind, how to understand a
sentence, how to learn to read, how language and writing systems
influence mental organizations.
People using the same language (i.e. English) but coming from
different cultures.
Example: Cultural differences in directness how explicitly and clearly
do we say what we mean.
Case study: letters of recommendation for a bright but immature
student, Peter Gore. (By John McCarthy)
Psycholinguistics
DEFINITION:
Psycholinguistics or psychology of language is the study of the
psychological and neurobiological factors that enable humans to acquire,
use, and understand language.
Introduction
During the past forty years there have been two major theories of
language learning by children. But there are two major schools of thought
known as, 'Behaviorists' and 'Mentalists'. One school is of the view that
environment affects all of us. Others have suggested that everybody has
these two schools of thought that how do children acquire their mother
system they are born with and how much do they discover from their
exposure to language?
free will, and it is not forced by any outside person or thing. The learner
EXPERIMENT
They put a rat in a box containing a bar. If it presses a bar, it is
rewarded with a pellet of food. Nothing forces it to press the bar. The first
time it probably does so accidentally. When the rat finds that the food
can obtain food by pressing the bar. Then task is made more difficult. The
rat only gets rewarded if it presses the bar while a light is flashing. At
first rat is puzzled. Eventually it learns the trick. Then the task is made
more difficult again. This time the rat only receives food if it presses the
REPETITION
kinds of reinforcement:
A) Positive Reinforcement
Praise and rewards are positive reinforcement. Experiments have
B) Negative Reinforcement
association. For example, a young child hears the word "water" with
the actual thing. He then makes this sound himself, imitating what he
has heard. His parents are pleased that he has learnt another word and
Negative Association
Reinforcement
Noam Chomsky explicitly rejects the behaviorists' position that
Chomsky and his mentalist followers claim that a child learns his
a mental capacity for working out the underlying system to the jumble
imposes it on all the sounds reaching his brain. This mental grammar
his brain until he has matched it against what he already knows and
that a child is born with some innate mental capacity which helps the
child to process all the language which he hears. This is called the
Language Acquisition Device, and he saws it as comprising a special
area of the brain whose only function was the processing of language.
sentences in his own language. Chomsky does not mean that a child
can describes these rules explicitly. For example, a four or five year
old child can produce a sentence like I have done my work; he can
form correct present perfect structures and also to use such structures
The thoughts of Mentalists can well be understood with the help of the
following manner:
This comparative study makes one thing clear: nature and nurture,
the family, if not in a way that can be called imitation, then at least in
terms of things the child chooses to do with its language. But we should
be wary of the idea that all children experience the same practices and
follow the same development path as they grow into their language.
information into his mini-grammar, modifies some of the rules, and again
master and internalize all the essential rules of language. This is a proof
that a child's own rules of grammar are more important to him than mere
imitation.