100% de satisfacción garantizada Inmediatamente disponible después del pago Tanto en línea como en PDF No estas atado a nada
logo-home
Summary Lecture notes 6,49 €
Añadir al carrito

Resumen

Summary Lecture notes

 4 vistas  0 veces vendidas
  • Grado
  • Institución

Lecture notes from Language and Communication SOW-PSB2SP25E. There was no book used in this course, there were only lectures and workgroups.

Última actualización de este documento: 2 año hace

Vista previa 2 fuera de 14  páginas

  • 8 de marzo de 2022
  • 8 de marzo de 2022
  • 14
  • 2021/2022
  • Resumen
avatar-seller
Language and Communication B2
Lecture 1 - Introduction
Communication

 Shannon-weaver sender-receiver model of communication
o Sender encodes message into a way that can be understood
o Signal is transmitted
o Receiver decodes message
 Channels
o Hearing (words, voice quality, language)
o Sight (body posture, gesture, face expression)
o Touch (handshake)
o Smell (perfume, body odour)

Language

Two key properties:

 Discrete symbols/signs (sounds, movements, words) that are arbitrary, sound-meaning
pairing are conventional  gestures are not language because they are not arbitrary (they
have clear meaning)
 Endless number of combinations according to certain rules (grammar), infinite number of
ideas (productivity)

Functions of Language

 Exchange information and ideas
 Expressing of emotions
 Social interactions (“bless you”, “have a nice weekend”)
 Entertainment: make use of sounds of language
 Rituals and beliefs (praying), control of reality
 Keep record (writing diaries)
 Instrument of thought (talking to myself)
 Identity expression (chanting of football songs)

Levels of language: sentence (semantics/meaning) - phrase (grammar/syntax) – word
(lexicon/vocabulary) – morpheme (morphology) – phoneme (phonology)

Sound of Language

 Volume (dB)
o Risk of damage around 90 dB, concert usually at 120 dB
o Inner hair cells get damaged with extended overstimulation
o High in vowels
 Frequency (Language: between 200 for low sounds like m and 5000 Hz for fricatives), high in
consonants

Vowels: periodic pattern in amplitude and frequency

 Tense vowels: sheep, lax vowels: ship
 Circled vowels: rounded

,  Diphthongs: vowels that change from one to another (“boat”)

Consonants: no typical pattern in frequency and amplitude

 Place and manner of articulation

Written language

Logography: based on pictographic, each character represents a semantic unit, several thousand
characters (e.g. Chinese)

Syllabary: each character corresponds to one syllable, several hundred characters

Alphabet: each character corresponds to one basic sound (phoneme), less than 100 characters,
abjad: only consonants are written (Hebrew), abugida: vowel and consonant written together
(Arabic)

Lecture 2 – Animal Language
Human language …

 Emergentist viewpoint
o Many properties that other communication systems have as well (like animals)
o Is about meaning and communication
o Is an aspect or by-product of our cognitive abilities (memory, learning, …)
 Nativist viewpoint
o Has unique properties
o Is about structure
o Independent of our cognitive abilities
o Noam Chomsky: genetic makeup dependent

Hockett’s features (developed in 60s - outdated)

1. Vocal-auditory channel: outdated  sign language

2. Broadcast transmission and directional reception: sender and receiver do not need to see each
other to understand  outdated because of sign language

3. Rapid fading: does not last, once sound waves travel to ear the signal is gone  outdated because
of written language and recordings

4. Interchangeability: once language is understood it can be produced (some birds can’t  females
can hear males but cannot produce sound, humans  babies/toddlers? Deaf people?)

5. Total feedback: speakers can hear themselves and make corrections

6. Specialization: human language sounds are specialised for communication (not a by-product like
dogs panting out of exhaustion)

7. Semanticity: language refers to something in the real world (“Pass the salt”)

8. Arbitrariness: label of word does not match actual thing (whale short word but big animal)

9. Discreteness: categories  language made up of independent moveable units (“b”, “p”), non-
discrete signal is loudness (continuum)

Los beneficios de comprar resúmenes en Stuvia estan en línea:

Garantiza la calidad de los comentarios

Garantiza la calidad de los comentarios

Compradores de Stuvia evaluaron más de 700.000 resúmenes. Así estas seguro que compras los mejores documentos!

Compra fácil y rápido

Compra fácil y rápido

Puedes pagar rápidamente y en una vez con iDeal, tarjeta de crédito o con tu crédito de Stuvia. Sin tener que hacerte miembro.

Enfócate en lo más importante

Enfócate en lo más importante

Tus compañeros escriben los resúmenes. Por eso tienes la seguridad que tienes un resumen actual y confiable. Así llegas a la conclusión rapidamente!

Preguntas frecuentes

What do I get when I buy this document?

You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.

100% de satisfacción garantizada: ¿Cómo funciona?

Nuestra garantía de satisfacción le asegura que siempre encontrará un documento de estudio a tu medida. Tu rellenas un formulario y nuestro equipo de atención al cliente se encarga del resto.

Who am I buying this summary from?

Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller juliabm1. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.

Will I be stuck with a subscription?

No, you only buy this summary for 6,49 €. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.

Can Stuvia be trusted?

4.6 stars on Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

45,681 summaries were sold in the last 30 days

Founded in 2010, the go-to place to buy summaries for 15 years now

Empieza a vender
6,49 €
  • (0)
Añadir al carrito
Añadido