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Cognitive Psychology Chapter X: Language in Context I

Psychology25 CardsCreated about 2 months ago

This deck covers key concepts from cognitive psychology related to language, including linguistic relativity, bilingualism, pidgins and creoles, metaphors, and pragmatics.

Linguistic relativity refers to the assertion that …

… speakers of different languages have different cognitive systems and think differently about the world.
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Key Terms

Term
Definition
Linguistic relativity refers to the assertion that …
… speakers of different languages have different cognitive systems and think differently about the world.
The linguistic relativity theory is aka.:
Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
Whorf said:
“We dissect nature along the lines laid down by our native language.”
A milder form of linguistic relativism would be to assume that …
… language doesn’t determine our thinking but influences it.
What are linguistic universals?
Characteristic patterns across all languages
Across languages there are differences in:
• color terms • language acquisition • use ratio of nouns/verbs

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TermDefinition
Linguistic relativity refers to the assertion that …
… speakers of different languages have different cognitive systems and think differently about the world.
The linguistic relativity theory is aka.:
Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
Whorf said:
“We dissect nature along the lines laid down by our native language.”
A milder form of linguistic relativism would be to assume that …
… language doesn’t determine our thinking but influences it.
What are linguistic universals?
Characteristic patterns across all languages
Across languages there are differences in:
• color terms • language acquisition • use ratio of nouns/verbs
Concepts in different languages - an example:
The Chinese concept of a specific typ of person. Bilinguists read a description in Chinese and in English.
What about bilinguism?
• Good if fluent in both. • Bad if not fluent in either.
Two theories connected to bilingualism:
• single-system hypothesis • dual-system hypothesis
What might be wrong about the division between single- and dual-system hypotheses?
They might ask the wrong questions, as some aspects of the languages might be represented in a single system, but others separately.
What’s a pidgin?
A mixture of two different languages. it is a language without native speakers.
Over time a pidgin can develop into a …
… creole.
Modern creoles may resemble an evolutionarily early form of language, called …
… protolanguage.
A dialect is a …
… regional variation of a language.
7 kinds of slips that can happen during conversation:
• anticipation (using an element to early) • perservation (keep using an element that was correct earlier) • substitution • reversal (switching position of two elements) • spoonerisms (initial sounds of two words are exchanged) • malapropism (saying something similar in sound, but different in meaning) • insertion of sounds (including additional sounds)
Metaphors use …
… similarities of two nouns and combine them despite their differences. (The house was a pigsty)
Similes are …
… comparisons.
Metaphors have 4 key elements:
• tenor (topic, e.g. house) • vehicle (word used to describe topic, e.g. pigsty) • ground (set of similarities) • tension (set of dissimilarities)
Theories about how metaphores work:
• comparison view (importance of comparison) • anomaly view (importance of dissimilarities) • domain-interaction view (interaction of some kind btw. tenor and vehicle)
In additive bilingualism …
… a second language is learned in addition to the first.
In substractive bilingualism …
… elements of a second language replace elements of the first.
Another time-related distinction of bilingualism:
• simultaneous bilingualism • sequential bilingualism
Pragmatics is …
… the study of how people use language.
Name an instance of non-verbal communication:
personal space
Study related to personal space:
proxemics