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CSD 333 Final || Questions with complete solutions. £13.43   Add to cart

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CSD 333 Final || Questions with complete solutions.

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  • Module
  • CSD 333
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  • CSD 333

What is language? correct answers A system of symbols Shared Conventionalized A tool for human communication Morphemes correct answers Smallest units of language that carry meaning eferentR correct answers An aspect of the world which is referred Higher-level language skills correct an...

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  • August 2, 2024
  • 36
  • 2024/2025
  • Exam (elaborations)
  • Questions & answers
  • CSD 333
  • CSD 333
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CSD 333 Final || Questions with complete solutions.
What is language? correct answers A system of symbols
Shared
Conventionalized
A tool for human communication

Morphemes correct answers Smallest units of language that carry meaning

eferentR correct answers An aspect of the world which is referred

Higher-level language skills correct answers They reflect cognitive acts like reasoning,
planning, problem solving

Modularity correct answers Refers to how the mind is organized within the structures of the
brain
Domain specific
Domain general

Language v. speech. v hearing correct answers Language - code to represent ideas (can be
expressed as speech, signs, or written language)

Speech - a neuromuscular activity involving production of sounds of language

Hearing - involves the reception of sound by the ear and transmission to the brain

Speech correct answers Requires muscular movements among several systems -

Respiration: breathing
Phonation: movements of vocal cords
Resonation: movements changing the nature of airflow through oral, nasal, and pharyngeal
spaces
Articulation: movements of the jaw, tongue, and lips for speech

not a language, a code and a physical act

Intact speech, impaired language correct answers In Wernicke's aphasia, speech sounds are
normal but meaning and language are impaired

Symbolic communication correct answers involves relation between a symbol (like a word)
and an entity

Preintentional communication correct answers There is intent, but referent is not clear

Intentional (iconic) communication correct answers Referent is clear from context

Components of communication correct answers Sender: formulation, transmission
-->
Shared mean: speech, gesture, sign, writing
-->

,Receiver: reception, comprehension

feedback

Feedback correct answers is information provided by the receiver to the sending
Kinds of feedback
- linguistic feedback
- non-linguistic (extralinguistic) feedback
- paralinguistic feedback

Conversation correct answers communication breakdowns
conversational repair

Purposes of communication correct answers Instrumental - ask for something

Regulatory - give directions, direct others

Interactional - interact and converse with others socially

Person - express a state of mind or feelings

Heuristic - find out information

Imaginative - tell stories and role play

Informative - provide a description of an event or object

Form correct answers How linguistic information is arranged to convey contact
Words have different requirements on their forms to construct grammatical sentences

Content correct answers Refers to the meaning of words
The lexicon is our mental dictionary

When meaning of words rely heavily on context, the language is contextualized

When there is little reliance on context, then language is decontextualized

Use correct answers Refers to how people "use" language to meet their needs

The use of language could be instrumental, regulatory, interactional, etc.

The child's language use primarily conveyed interactional and personal intent

Components of form, content, use correct answers Phonology - refers to rules governing the
way sounds make syllables and words

Phonology - the smallest unit of sound that can signal and difference in meaning (cat, mat,
bat, rat, etc.)

Allophones are variations on a phoneme sound

,(/p/ in pat vs. spat)

Morphology - refers to the organization of word parts (cat, cats, plural s marker, s inflectional
ending)

Syntax - refers to rules governing internal structure of sentences

Semantics - refers to meaning of words and word combinations

Pragmatics - refers to how language is used for social purposed

Unit 3 correct answers

Language acquisition correct answers Children develop language rapidly - FAST MAPPING

evidence for a critical period for language learning

Genie case correct answers Suggested that language mastery requires learning during a
critical period

Still, substantial learning can take place after the critical period

Acquisition rate correct answers Children's speedy rate of acquisition of linguistic info is a
remarkable feature of language

Universality correct answers People around the world have the same basic brain mechanisms
to learn language

Human brains are particularly well-suited to developing a symbolic spoken code (language)

Species specificity correct answers Non-human animals and insects have intentional
communication

Language is specific humans

Semanticity correct answers Language allows people to represent decontextualized events
- called semanticity or displacement

There is an arbitrary mapping between words (lexical items) and referents

Productivity correct answers the ability to combine different units into infinite new
combinations

Language differences correct answers Dialect - everyone has it
Bilingualism - code switching
Gender
Genetic predisposition
Language - learning environment

Prestige correct answers A dialect has overt prestige

, - if the dialect is considered standard or proper
- if used by the society as a whole

A dialect has covert prestige
- is considered local or restricted to one group (often working class)
- the features are considered non-standard or incorrect

African American Vernacular English (AAVE) correct answers Ex:
"That hers"
"I be talking"
"Mos"

Quantity correct answers Refers to
- properties of heard language
- "goodness" of the heard language

The more spoken language heard, the better the language development

Sentence complexity - hearing more complex sentence forms predicts using more complex
forms

Caregiver responsiveness - children of more responsive caregivers develop language faster

Reticence correct answers Means tending to be silent or reserved

Teachers may have difficulty working with reticent children

Language impairment correct answers Heritable language impairment
- specific language impairment
- frequent reason for intervention
- evidence supports it being inherited

Developmental disability
- language impairment can be secondary to intellectual disability (Down syndrome) and
autism

Brain injury

Some scientific disciplines correct answers Developmental psychology
Linguistics
Psycholinguistics
Linguistic anthropology
Speech language pathology
Education
Sociology

Basic research correct answers focuses on enhancing scientific understanding via theory
development

Applied research correct answers focuses on specific applied problems

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