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Summary Psychology (SLK) Chapter 8 - Cognition and Language $2.75
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Summary Psychology (SLK) Chapter 8 - Cognition and Language

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This summary focuses on Cognition and Language. It contains: terminology, structure of language, 3 areas of language, milestones in language development, bilingualism, theories of language acquisition, problem-solving, and decision making. This summary is written according to Chapter 8 from the te...

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  • July 7, 2020
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Chapter 8 – Cognition and Language
(Pages 228 - 247)

Language: Turning Thoughts into Words

Structure of Language
Language: the arrangement of sounds used to communicate thoughts and feelings
Has to following characteristics:
1. It is symbolic – system of signs and purposeful symbols are used to represent something
2. It is infinitely generative – can be rearranged and combined limitlessly to convey ideas
3. It is structured (rule-governed) – enables people to produce and interpret meaning universally
4. It is semantic (meaningful) – enables us to send and receive information, allows for
communication and socialisation

3 key areas of language:
1. The Medium of Transmission through:
 Phonetics: the study of sounds in human speech
It looks at the physical production, sound transmission and perception of the sounds
of speech
 Phonology: the methodical organisation of sounds in languages
It describes the way sounds function within a language to translate meaning
Phone: a unit of speech sound, can be the smallest contrastive linguistic unit used to
bring about change in meaning (a set: phonemes)
2. Grammar:
 Morphology: the system of meaningful forms in words
The identification, analysis and description of the language-system’s morphemes
Includes root words, prefixes and suffixes
Phonemes  Morphemes  Words
 Syntax: the order in which words are put together to form a sentence
Sentences are combined used specific/fixed rules, a sentence always has a subject
and a predicate
3. Semantics (Meaning): (how words and their fundamental meanings relate to each other)
 Lexicon: a language’s word stock (language’s dictionary)
 Discourse: written and spoken communication

Milestones in Language Development

1. Precursors of speech: the foundations of sound which are used by new born babies
 Attending to talking, hearing changes in sound, rhythm and tone
 Although the noises they make are not considered words, they still communicate emotions
2. Vocalisation: the stage characterised by babbling and cooing.
 Starts at 3-4 months old and ends between 9 and 12 months old, but can continue even
after their first words
 Babbling: the production of a wide variety of sounds that correspond to phonemes and
eventually, becomes repetitive consonant-vowel combinations, such as ‘lalala’.
3. Word development
 Child first need to distingush between speech and non-speech (10 – 18 months)
 Speech is broken into words and then sounds
 Playing with these sounds leads to planned and organised speech
 Before speaking children need to understand many words = receptive > productive vocab
 Receptive vocabulary: comprehension of speech
 Productive vocabulary: when and how the child responds or talks
4. Holophrases: single words used as sentences. E.g. ‘up’ means ‘Please pick me up’
 Used around 12 months
5. 2-word sentences
1

,  Used from 18 months to 3 years
 Use content words, articles and prepositions in 2-word sentences to express an action (Me
jump), possession (My bottle) or location (Mama outside)
 Learn about grammar by listening to other people speak
 Language acquisition at this age can be characterised in 4 ways:
o Telegraphic speech: content is brief and certain unimportant words are
excluded (E.g. ‘Give bottle’ instead of ‘Please give me the bottle’)
Ignores articles, prepositions and other nonessential words
o Over-extension: occurs when a child applies the meaning of a word too widely.
E.g. using ‘cat’ to describe all animals
o Under-extension: occurs when a child restricts the meaning of a word.
E.g. using the word ‘brush’ only for their toothbrush
o Over-regularisation: when a particular grammatical rule is used too much
E.g. If a child learns to add an ‘s’ to make a word plural, they might say ‘tooths’
instead of ‘teeth’
6. Sentence construction
 Construct more elaborate sentences
 Happens between 3 and 6 years old
 Vocab increase rapidly: 5-9 words daily
 Become more aware of and familiar with metalinguistic awareness: the ability to
consciously reflect on the nature of language
 Allows children to understand literal and implied meanings, therefore they can use
metaphors and later learn sarcasm and irony

Bilingualism: Learning More Than One Language

Bilingualism: the acquisition of two languages that use different speech sounds, vocabulary and
grammatical rules

Does Learning Two Languages Simultaneously Slow Down Language Development?

 Simultaneous acquisition: occurs when a child is exposed to 2 languages from birth
 At first children will occasionally mix words and sounds, but when they are about 5, they are
capable of keeping languages separate
 Successive acquisition: occurs when a monolingual child is exposed to a second language
(E.g. learning a language at school that is different from your home language)
 Learning a 2nd language is influenced by unique temperament; learning style; and skills in
social, cultural, cognitive and linguistic areas
 The degree to which a child learns a second language is dependant on how proficient they
are in their home language

Does Bilingualism Affect Cognitive Processes and Skills?

 Greater cognitive flexibility and analytical thinking
 More creative solutions in cognitive tasks

Can Animals Develop Language?
 Communicative units used by animals lack the symbolic quality of human language and are
directly related to their semantic content
 Animal communication cannot be generated infinitely either as they are simply repetitive
communications
 Noam Chomsky tried to teach a chimpanzee, but it never got past a 4-year old’s level as it
could not understand syntax and vocab was limited. Many believe is was not mastery of
language, but rather learnt behaviours
Language in Evolutionary Context
2

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