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Psychological Mechanisms and the Perception of Language

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Title: Psychological Mechanisms and the Perception of Language


1
Psychological Mechanisms and the Perception of
Language
2
Part 1 Information Processing Models
  • Currently most models of language comprehension
    and/or production fall within the category of
    Information Processing Models.

3
Key Concepts for IPMs
  • Memory
  • Working memory
  • Permanent memory
  • Sensory memory (Some theories refer instead to
    receptive and productive gestalts for processing
    within each sensory input system.)
  • Receptive channel
  • Productive channel
  • Capacity

4
Diagnosis Corner - Dc
  • Assume that memory is a central IP process. I am
    faced with the following scenario.
  • Wandering around a conference hotel, I step into
    a session in progress. At first it sounds very
    much like a talk about new directions in the
    recovery of language functions for brain-injured
    children. I start to have trouble understanding
    the material within a very short time.

5
Dc continued
  • The seminar is really about decoding the
    language of dolphins. The presenter is using
    spectrographs to provide physical evidence of
    prosodic variation that may have semantic
    importance. In other words, the researcher is
    trying to understand better how the creatures
    communicate under water.

6
Dc continued
  • IP suggests that I am depending mostly on memory,
    both to follow the presentation, and then to
    decide that I had better get up and leave,
    because I am out of my league.

7
Dc continued
  • Memory I have a set of concepts that I have
    stored. They are based on past learning that
    overlaps somewhat, but not enough, with the new
    material.
  • Working memory I compare new concepts with old
    ones constantly to make sense of what I am
    hearing.
  • Sensory memory (mostly visual and auditory)
    allows me to double check new information - from
    slides and from researcher speech - against what
    I think I already know.
  • Permanent memory Some of this new information
    is going to become part of my constant store of
    information. As I process, I store in memory. Who
    knows? I may draw on these new ideas at a later
    time.

8
Dc continued
  • The new material is entering through the
    receptive channel. There are as many of these
    as there are senses used to receive information.
    Sensory material is then passed onto Memory to be
    coded and organized.
  • Fortunately I wont be asked to repeat or retell
    what I just heard. But if that did happen, I
    would be using the productive channel to
    recreate the information. Organized information
    would be fed through by working memory. The
    details of course would be retrieved from
    permanent memory.

9
Dc continued
  • At a very profound level, the inability to
    understand and recreate experience using
    receptive and productive language speaks to
    impairments of IP. This is one area where
    diagnosis of language difficulties can start.
    There are other ways of understanding where to
    begin diagnosis that are layered on top of these
    very basic processes.

10
Capacity
  • The whole or entirety of ones psychic potential.
  • Capacity is like space on your hard drive. The
    more you tax it with serial and/or parallel
    processing tasks, the less there is available for
    new work.
  • Lets spend some time thinking about how that
    would work in a variety of language contexts.

11
Why Do We Need to Think About Capacity?
  • A professor is constructing a series of power
    point slides about a technically complicated
    topic. As she types, she also modifies her
    language to move it away from the more technical
    jargon (which is in fact how she understands the
    topic herself). She is interrupted by an
    administrator who asks her a question about
    Roberts Rules of Order. Can we construct a model
    of all the psychological and linguistic acts that
    must be occurring and taxing her capacity?

12
Quick Break for Vocabulary Review
  • Serial processing A particular mental strategy
    is dependent on one that occurs before it.
  • Parallel processing Two or more mental
    strategies that can or must be engaged at the
    same time.
  • Top-down versus bottom-up processing A global
    or holistic understanding is constructed and is
    later analyzed in terms of part/whole
    relationships. Versus, specific features of a
    problem that are processed first and later
    connected to form an integrated pattern.
  • Automatic versus controlled processes Some
    processing must occur with automaticity in order
    to be functional. Other processes require
    conscious monitoring in order to be functional.
  • Modularity A range of variation in behavior is
    possible within normative limits. Beyond those
    limits the behavior is unintelligible.
  • .

13
Serial processing A particular mental
strategy is dependent on one that occurs before
it.
  • Twas brillig
  • I decode this in a particular order of
    sound/letter relationships.

14
Parallel processing Two or more mental
strategies can or must engage at the same time.
  • And the slithey tove
  • While I am combining sound/letter relationships,
    I am also creating gestalts, organized
    information.
  • That is, I am trying to group these patterns to
    find their meaning.
  • Slithey is sounding like something I heard of
    before. So is tove.

15
Top-down versus bottom-up processing
  • Is it global first, and then I begin to work in
    the particulars?
  • Or do I deal with the particulars and see how
    they fit together?
  • Lets see.

16
  • did gire and gimble in the wabe
  • Top-down, I start trying to form a gestalt that
    two events or acts are occurring in the same
    location (as in toss and tumble in the waves).
  • Bottom-up, and I return to the statement several
    times, as I try to decide which elements support
    my overall interpretation.
  • It is important to keep in mind that this happens
    reciprocally. It is not a matter of one or the
    other.

17
A language event.How do IP models work in
theory?
  • Twas brillig and the slithey tove did gire and
    gimble in the wabe
  • HuH!
  • By using organized nonsense it is possible to see
    how quickly the mind springs into gear and tries
    to create meaning from nonsense. A number of
    psychological processes are brought into play.
    Can you name a few as you monitor your own
    awareness of thought?

18
The Diagnosis Corner
  • By making a list of all the problems you are
    encountering when trying to translate Lewis
    Carrolls line of poetry, you might end up with a
    fairly complete set of problems that anyone faces
    when trying to process language that is new,
    difficult, or never heard it before. Try it out
    and see what happens.

19
Part 2 Perception of Language
  • Mostly it is all about phonics and prosody.

20
Modularity
  • We need to contrast two opposing concepts
  • Invariance
  • Individual variation
  • This discussion becomes extremely important when
    thinking about dialect variation.

21
Invariance
  • To be understood, we have to utter sounds in an
    intonational range that is perceptible.
  • To be understood, the sounds themselves have to
    fall within a set of parameters that set a
    bandwidth for variation in sound.

22
Perceptibility and Invariance
  • The sound heard for e has a set of parameters
    for phonic variation outside of which it is no
    longer recognizable as long e.
  • It can vary in the English language from what
    would roughly be eeee to ay depending upon
    regional factors.

23
  • Invariance is a requirement for intelligibility.
  • Consider the implications of this simple
    principle for victims of brain trauma to language
    centers, individuals with motor impairments of
    the speech apparatus, children who are exposed to
    adult speakers who vary in the extreme from what
    is modular.

24
Individual variation
  • Within the bandwidth that establishes modularity
    much variation actually occurs. That is what
    makes my voice distinguishable and gives me a
    speech signature that is almost as good as my
    fingerprints. There are also ranges of variation
    that establish the bandwidth for dialect
    variations in phonological contour. Some dialects
    vary so greatly in terms of sound patterning that
    they are not intelligible to speakers of the same
    language but of different dialect. The sound
    contour of Italian spoken in Turin is virtually
    unintelligible to a Neapolitan speaker (excluding
    semantic and syntactic variation in dialects).
    When differences are that great, the principle of
    modularity has been breached. Confusion reigns.
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