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Hafiza.Iqra Abadullah(4362)
Dept:Applied Linguistics
BS 5th
GC University Faisalabad
Psycholinguistics
1-An Introduction
2-Acquisition
3-Production
4-Comprehension
1-Introduction
NEUROLINGUISTICS
Neurolinguistics is an old term for psycholinguistics.
In 18th century the relationship between language and human brain is
called Neurolinguistics.
Neurolinguistics is the study of
neural mechanism in the human
brain that controls acquisition,
Production & comprehension.
Psycholinguistics
Psycholinguistics is the branch of study which combines the
discipline of psychology and linguistics.
It is concerned with the relationship between human mind
and language as it examine the process that occur in brain
while producing and receiving both spoken and written
discourse.
Important aspects of Psycholinguistics
Coinage of term.
As a separate branch of study.
Chomskyan Revolution.
Work on psycholinguistics.
Areas of Study.
Methodologies.
Language Acquisition.
Language Production.
Language comprehension.
COINAGE OF TERM
PSYCHOLINGUISTS
• This term is coined by JACOB ROBERT.
Frequently used in 1946 due to NICHOLS HENNRY.
CHOMSKYAN REVULATION
• Chomsky posited humans possess a special innate ability
for language and that complex syntactic feature such as
recursion are hardwired in the brain.
All the humans have a ability to learn language.
LAD is fixed in human mind.
WORK
• Work on psycholinguistics starts as far as PLATO.
It become prominent in 19th century with linguistics.
Paul Broca , Charles Hockett and Willern Levelt are
important psycholinguist who did work on it.
Old Theory
• 1st concept is that language exist in right hemisphere.
13 Design Features of Language
Willem Levelt
• Willem Johannes Maria (Pim) Levelt (born 17 May 1938 in
Amsterdam) is a Dutch psycholinguist. He is an influential researcher
of human language acquisition and speech production. He
developed a comprehensive theory of the cognitive processes
involved in the act of speaking, including the significance of the
"mental lexicon".
Areas of Study
Cognitive
science
Psychology
Linguistics
Speech
&
Language
pathology
Paul Broca
Pierre Paul Broca (28 June 1824 – 9 July 1880) was a French
physician, surgeon, anatomist, and anthropologist. He was
born in Sainte-Foy-la-Grande, Gironde. He is best known for
his research on Broca's area, a region of the frontal lobe.
Charles Hockett
• In the 1960s, linguistic anthropologist Charles F. Hockett
defined a set of features that characterize human language
and set it apart from animal communication. He called
these characteristics the design features of language.
Theories of Psycholinguistics
Acquisition
copmrehension
Production
2-Acquisition
2-First Language Acquisition
• The learning of a native or first language is called
first language acquisition.
• It’s also known as developmental
psycholinguistics.
• It is just one stand of Psycholinguistic which is all about
how people to speak and the mental processes involved.
• Are we taught to speak by our parents? , or are we born
with knowledge in our brains that helps us to pick up
language quickly.
• So really, it’s a question of nature vs. nurture.
Nature Nurture
• Michael Tamasello:
• He believes that children
acquire language first and
foremost by understanding
how others use language.
• Noam Chomsky”
• He believes that we have
pre-wired structure in our
brains, which helps us to
have advance knowledge
about language, known as
Atavism.
• Children look for regular
patterns in speech and use
these as rules to work out
new utterance,
such as applying the past
tens: every word ending with
“ed”.
• Later Chomsky believe
that we are born with
“switches” in our brains.
English: SVO
Turkish: SOV
• B. F. Skinner:
• Skinner research comes
under the term
“Behaviorism” which
may be familiar to the
studying psychology.
His belief is that children
learn language through
their parents and other
sibling around them.
Two basic notions in first language acquisition.
Overgeneralization
 Under generalization
1-Overgeneralization
• The extension of a rule beyond to its proper limits.
For Example: it is a frequent phenomenon in language
development.
It can be found not only in syntactic usage nut also in
word-meaning.
Moon= all round objects
cars= all vehicles
dogs= all for legged animals
2-Undergeneralization
• When a child uses a word in a more limited way than
adults do this phenomenon is known as
undergeneralization.
For Example:
Shoes= only refers to his mother’s shoes.
Reasons for overgeneralization and
undergeneralization
• On some Occasions: children’s conceptual categories
differ from adults
• On other occasions: they may know perfectly well that
a cow is not a dog, but not know what is called
• On still other Occasions: The children’s misuse of
words may reflects an attempt at humor.
3-Second Language Acquisition
• This is the Process by which people learn a Second
Language (L2). This research focuses on the
developing knowledge and use of a language by
children and adults who already know at least one
other language.
Theories of Second Language Learning
1-Universal Grammar
• Chomsky describes this theory as knowledge that people
are born with. Basically skill of language people already
have without being thought .
2-Monitor Theory
The point of this theory is to note the
differences between ‘acquisition’ and
‘learning’.
Acquisition is hypothesized to occur in a
manner similar to first language acquisition,
learning is described as a conscious process,
one in which the learner’s attention is directed
to the rules and forms of the language.
3-Behaviorism
It dominated psychology and education theories of second language
learning and teaching. Behaviourism was based on the view that all
learning including language learning occurs through a process of
imitation, practice, reinforcement and habit formation.
4-Cognitive Psychology
Cognitive psychologists hypothesized that second language
acquisition, like other learning, requires the learner’s attention and
effort.
Some theories suggested that language is fist acquired through
intentional learning of what is called ‘declarative knowledge’ and that
the declarative knowledge can become ‘procedural knowledge’
5- Integrationist Perspectives
This theory explains the ongoing use of language and
gestures in anticipation of how the other will react in
a conversation. It’s not only the speakers reactions
but also the listeners.
Instruction and Second Language Acquisition
Research shows that instruction can have a significant effect
on second language acquisition, at least in terms of the
rate of learning and the long-term success that learner
achieve in using the language accurately.
In the context of communicative interaction, learners seem to
be able to benefit more form instruction and error feedback
which focus on semantic or lexical errors than from that
which targets syntactic errors.
Factors
INDIVIDUAL FACTORS
1.Age
2.Personality
3.Motivation
4.Experiences
5.Cognition
1-AGE
Second language acquisition is
influenced by the age of the
learner.
Children with solid literacy skills
in their own language, seem to
be in the best position to acquire
a new language efficiently.
2-PERSONALITY
Introverted or anxious learners
usually make slower progress,
particularly in the development
of oral skills. They are less likely
to take opportunities to speak.
They
will take risks, and thus will give
themselves much more practice.
3-EXPERIENCES
Learners who have acquired
general knowledge and
experience are in a stronger
position to develop a new
language than those who
haven't.
4-MOTIVATION
•Intrinsic motivation:
Refers to motivation that comes from inside
an individual rather than from any external
or outside rewards, such as money or
grades.
Extrinsic motivation :
refers to motivation that comes from
outside an individual. The motivating
factors are external, or outside,
rewards such as money or grades.
These rewards provide satisfaction
and pleasure that the task itself may
not provide.
5-COGNITION
In general, it seems that
students with greater cognitive
abilities will make the faster
progress. Some linguists believe
that there is a specific, innate
language learning ability that is
stronger in some students than
in others.
How much wood
would a woodchuck
chuck, if a
woodchuck could
chuck wood?
AFFECTIVE FACTORS
Affective factors are emotional factors which influence
learning.
1.Self-Esteem
2.Inhibition
3.Risk Taking
4.Anxiety
5.Empathy
Comparison between 1st &
2nd language Acquisition
Similarities
1-In both first and second language acquisition, there
are predictable stages, and particular structures are
acquired in a set order. Individuals may move more slowly
or quickly through these stages, but they cannot skip
ahead.
2-In both first and second language acquisition, making
errors is a part of learning. For example, a learner may
start out using the correct form of an irregular verb as part
of a language chunk, but later over-generalize and place a
regular affix on that same verb.
3-In both first and second language acquisition, the learner
uses context clues, prior knowledge, and interaction to
comprehend language.
4-And in both first and second language acquisition, Age is
an important variable affecting proficiency.
Differences
1-In first language acquisition, children spend several
years listening to language, babbling, and using
telegraphic speech before they can form sentences. But in
second language acquisition in older learners, learning is
more rapid and people are able to form sentences within a
shorter period of time.
2-In second language learning in older learners, learners
are able to use more metacognitive processes in their
learning. They can consciously analyze and manipulate
grammatical structures, and they can describe how
language works. This can speed the learning process.
3-In second language learning in older learners, learners
bring more life experience and background knowledge to
their learning. They have more schemata and more
learning strategies to help them learn the second language.
4-Almost everyone acquires a first language, but not
everyone acquires a second language. Acquiring a first
language happens naturally, while acquiring a second
language often requires conscious effort on the part of the
learner.
3-Production
Language production is the production of spoken & written
language. It describes all stages between having a concept
into linguistic form.
SPEECH PRODUCTION
• It concerns with how people produce language in
his/her mind to convey their meanings that are
comprehensible to others either it is in written form or
spoken form
• Basically it refers that how humans use words to
communicate ideas and feelings and how such
communication are understood.
• In simple wording it is how the brain creates and
understands language
Sub-Levels Of Speech Production
There are four sub-levels in speech production
Conceptualization
Formulation
Articulation
Self-Monitoring
1-Conceptualization
This is what we wish to communicate.
 Example:-
 People who are coming from different cultures
but using same language like (English).
 We have to notice that how clearly do they say
and what they mean.
Levelt’s Model
• A psycholinguist who gave a model in 1989
• CONCEPTUALIZATION ( what we wish to
communicate)
• FORMULATION ( formulate the thoughts into
linguistic plan)
• ARTICULATION (execute the plan through the
biological speech system)
• SELF-MONITORING (monitor the speech whether it
is what we intend to say and how we intend to say)
David McNeil's Model
• An American psycholinguist who gave this model.
• He focus on speech first conceptualized in human mind.
• He claimed that syntactic thoughts and imagistic thoughts
collaborate to conceptualize conversation.
•
• SPEECH CONCEPTUALIZATION
• Syntactic thoughts
• Imagistic thoughts
• Example:-
• Person A:Where is my brief case?
• Person B:There’s your brief case.
• This is when person B point to the brief case the same
when he says:thers’s.
Insights of production process
There are three insights of production process:
1. It demonstrates that speakers are constantly self
editing.
2. It suggests that speakers are intuitively sensitive to
what stage of production process went awry, if indeed a
mistake was made.
3. There is a distinction between performance and
competence.
Examples :
1. I think it costs just about…uh..twenty five dollars.
2. They have to try to…uh…contact an attorney.
 Hostiations like those exemplified in (1)and (2) are not
mistake certainly not in the sense that the term has
been defined and illustrate here.
2-Formulation
• Formulation is the
eventual output of
speech
conceptualization.
• Gestures plays a
functional role in
formulation of speech.
• Long term memory
resources are thought
to be necessary for
conceptualization and
verbal working
memory resources are
thought to necessary
for formulation.
Formulation is related
to slips of tongue in
speech production.
Spoonerism
This term is introduced by Dr.William
Spooner(1844-1930)
Spoonerisms are Speech error in which the initial letter or
letters of two or more words are switched.
8 major types of slips of the tongue
 These errors appear at all levels phoneme,
morpheme & word level.
Example
That’s so she'll be ready in case she
decide to hits it(decides to hits it).
Fancy getting your model
renosed(getting your nose
remodeled)
Bake my bike(take my bike)
He pulled a pantrum(tantrum)
Type
1-Shift
2-Exchange
3-Anticipation
4-Preseveration
I didn’t explain this clarefully
enough(carefully)
I’ll just get up & mutter
intelligibly(unintelligibly)
At slow speed it’s too light (heavy)
That’s child looking to be spaddled
(paddled/spanked)
5-Addition
6-Deletion
7-Substituion
8-Blend
3-Articulation
• Articulation concerned
with sounds in speech
production,when,where
and how sounds are
articulate in the mouth
and vocals of a human.
• It includes “Place of
Articulation” & “Manner
of Articulation”
Place of Articulation
• It is the place where
obstruction occurs in the
vocal tracts.
• It includes;
• The upper lip (Bilabial
sounds)
• The upper teeth, either
on the edge of the teeth
or inner surface (Dental
sounds)
• The alveolar ridge, the
gum line just behind the
teeth.(Alveolar sounds)
Manner of Articulation
• The manner of
articulation is the
configuration and
interaction of the
articulators.
• It includes;
• Stops
• Fricatives
• The back of the alveolar
ridge.(Post alveolar
sounds)
• The hard palate in the
roof of mouth.(Palatal
Sounds)
• The soft palate back on
the roof of the
mouth.(Velar sounds)
• The epiglottis at the
entrance to the
windpipe.(Glottal
sounds)
• Affricates
• Nasals
• Flaps
• Lateral
• Approximants
Articulation includes consonant sounds as well as vowel
sounds, vowel sounds includes short vowels & long vowels.
4-Self-monitoring
 Production process sometime goes away and
Speaker will verbally misstep, especially with regular
or more unusual form.
Examples :
1. The last I knowed about it(I mean knew about it),it
had left Vancouver.
2. She was so drank(I mean drunk ),that we decided
to drive her home.
Mistakes are production problems, they that are
trouble you have with your linguistic printer , not
with the original software.
Errors are committed by non-native speaker.
Examples :
3. I think it cost just…uh…about twenty five dollars.
4. They have …uh…to try to contact an attorney.
 Just about, and have to function as linguistic units, so it
is improbable that the speaker would hesitate in the
middle of either one, after having already chosen to fill
the linguistic slot of the utterance with those phrases.
 The attested presence of a self monitoring stage that
people don’t just communicate with themselves, they
don’t just listen to others, they listen to themselves.
4-Comprehension
Definition of Comprehension
• The word comprehension means understanding .
• Comprehension actually comes from Latin term.
• An ability to understand the meaning or impotence of
something [or knowledge acquire as a result.
1-Sound Comprehension
• Comprehension is strongly influenced by even the slightest
of changes in discourse which the listener is attending to.
• In the course of every day conversation we don’t hear
vowels and consonant as isolated sounds
• The [p] is the following words is produced slightly different
the initial [p] of pool pronounced with puckered lips but the
same [p] in peel is spoken with the lip spread
• Despite all variations in [p] native speakers of English
almost never confuse any manifestation of the [p] sound
with [b] which is acoustically similar.
• Example these sound Benny and penny.
The main feature which English speakers attend to is the
[Voice onset Timing] [VOT] of initial consonant the most
significant difference English consonant like [b]and [p] is
the length of time.
Psycholinguistic have discovered that human are actually
born with the ability to focus in on VOT differences in the
speech sounds.
The successful comprehension is a combination of the
innate ability to recognize fine distinctions between speech
and sounds which all human appear to possess along with
the ability all learner have to adjust their acoustic
categories to the parameters of the language .
2-Word Comprehension
Definition:
The word comprehension means understanding. When
you lack comprehension of a difficult word, you will
likely need to look up its definition and usage in a cool,
down-to-earth online dictionary! Comprehension actually
comes from the Latin term, comprehension, which means
"a seizing. “
Representation of the Meaning of Words
Comprehension
• Reference Theory
• Prototype Theory
• Decomposition Theory
1-Reference Theory:
which equates a word’s meaning with what that
word refers to in the world
For example, the noun drawer is identified with a sliding box-shaped part
of a piece of furniture used for storage.
2-Prototype Theory:
Assumes that a word’s meaning can be derived from a
bundle of features, no one of which is individually either necessary or
sufficient.
3-Decomposition Theory:
which holds that the Meaning of an utterance can be
derived if the latter is broken down into its component semantic
features.
3-Sentence Comprehension
• Sentence comprehension is known as to be difficult for
orally trained individual with hearing impairment.
• Sentence comprehension has to deal with ambiguity in
spoken and written utterance e.g: lexical, structural and
semantic ambiguities.
 Some Psycholinguists
have focused on fact that
the sentence
comprehension system
continually creates novel,
representation of novel
messages, following the
constraints of a language
grammar and does so in a
remarkable speed.
 some emphasized that
comprehension system is
senstive to a vast range of
information including
grammatical, lexical and
textual.
In 1950’s
Chomsky gave a model of sentence grammar structure of the basis of
which Psycholinguists first began to examine the comprehension of
sentences.
In 1982 & 1992
Frazier, Rayner and
Pretchett (former theorists) have
constructed serial model that
describes that how a processor
quickly constructs one or more
representation of sentence based
on restricted range of information.
In 1994
McDonald, Pearlmutter and
seidenberg have constructed
parallel model describing how
processor use all relevent
information to quickly evaluates
the full range of interpretations of
a sentence.
Here are some examples
• Tom is not going to your school.
• The man who ate at my house last night.
• Tommy is coming to your pool.
• Dog is chasing the cat.
• The cat is being chased by dog.
Lecture-1 An Introduction to Psycholinguistics.pdf
Lecture-1 An Introduction to Psycholinguistics.pdf

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Lecture-1 An Introduction to Psycholinguistics.pdf

  • 4. NEUROLINGUISTICS Neurolinguistics is an old term for psycholinguistics. In 18th century the relationship between language and human brain is called Neurolinguistics. Neurolinguistics is the study of neural mechanism in the human brain that controls acquisition, Production & comprehension.
  • 5. Psycholinguistics Psycholinguistics is the branch of study which combines the discipline of psychology and linguistics. It is concerned with the relationship between human mind and language as it examine the process that occur in brain while producing and receiving both spoken and written discourse.
  • 6. Important aspects of Psycholinguistics Coinage of term. As a separate branch of study. Chomskyan Revolution. Work on psycholinguistics. Areas of Study. Methodologies. Language Acquisition. Language Production. Language comprehension.
  • 7. COINAGE OF TERM PSYCHOLINGUISTS • This term is coined by JACOB ROBERT. Frequently used in 1946 due to NICHOLS HENNRY.
  • 8. CHOMSKYAN REVULATION • Chomsky posited humans possess a special innate ability for language and that complex syntactic feature such as recursion are hardwired in the brain. All the humans have a ability to learn language. LAD is fixed in human mind.
  • 9. WORK • Work on psycholinguistics starts as far as PLATO. It become prominent in 19th century with linguistics. Paul Broca , Charles Hockett and Willern Levelt are important psycholinguist who did work on it.
  • 10. Old Theory • 1st concept is that language exist in right hemisphere.
  • 11. 13 Design Features of Language
  • 12. Willem Levelt • Willem Johannes Maria (Pim) Levelt (born 17 May 1938 in Amsterdam) is a Dutch psycholinguist. He is an influential researcher of human language acquisition and speech production. He developed a comprehensive theory of the cognitive processes involved in the act of speaking, including the significance of the "mental lexicon".
  • 14. Paul Broca Pierre Paul Broca (28 June 1824 – 9 July 1880) was a French physician, surgeon, anatomist, and anthropologist. He was born in Sainte-Foy-la-Grande, Gironde. He is best known for his research on Broca's area, a region of the frontal lobe.
  • 15. Charles Hockett • In the 1960s, linguistic anthropologist Charles F. Hockett defined a set of features that characterize human language and set it apart from animal communication. He called these characteristics the design features of language.
  • 18. 2-First Language Acquisition • The learning of a native or first language is called first language acquisition. • It’s also known as developmental psycholinguistics.
  • 19. • It is just one stand of Psycholinguistic which is all about how people to speak and the mental processes involved. • Are we taught to speak by our parents? , or are we born with knowledge in our brains that helps us to pick up language quickly. • So really, it’s a question of nature vs. nurture.
  • 20. Nature Nurture • Michael Tamasello: • He believes that children acquire language first and foremost by understanding how others use language. • Noam Chomsky” • He believes that we have pre-wired structure in our brains, which helps us to have advance knowledge about language, known as Atavism. • Children look for regular patterns in speech and use these as rules to work out new utterance, such as applying the past tens: every word ending with “ed”.
  • 21. • Later Chomsky believe that we are born with “switches” in our brains. English: SVO Turkish: SOV • B. F. Skinner: • Skinner research comes under the term “Behaviorism” which may be familiar to the studying psychology. His belief is that children learn language through their parents and other sibling around them.
  • 22. Two basic notions in first language acquisition. Overgeneralization  Under generalization
  • 23. 1-Overgeneralization • The extension of a rule beyond to its proper limits. For Example: it is a frequent phenomenon in language development. It can be found not only in syntactic usage nut also in word-meaning. Moon= all round objects cars= all vehicles dogs= all for legged animals
  • 24. 2-Undergeneralization • When a child uses a word in a more limited way than adults do this phenomenon is known as undergeneralization. For Example: Shoes= only refers to his mother’s shoes.
  • 25. Reasons for overgeneralization and undergeneralization • On some Occasions: children’s conceptual categories differ from adults • On other occasions: they may know perfectly well that a cow is not a dog, but not know what is called • On still other Occasions: The children’s misuse of words may reflects an attempt at humor.
  • 26. 3-Second Language Acquisition • This is the Process by which people learn a Second Language (L2). This research focuses on the developing knowledge and use of a language by children and adults who already know at least one other language.
  • 27. Theories of Second Language Learning 1-Universal Grammar • Chomsky describes this theory as knowledge that people are born with. Basically skill of language people already have without being thought .
  • 28. 2-Monitor Theory The point of this theory is to note the differences between ‘acquisition’ and ‘learning’. Acquisition is hypothesized to occur in a manner similar to first language acquisition, learning is described as a conscious process, one in which the learner’s attention is directed to the rules and forms of the language.
  • 29. 3-Behaviorism It dominated psychology and education theories of second language learning and teaching. Behaviourism was based on the view that all learning including language learning occurs through a process of imitation, practice, reinforcement and habit formation. 4-Cognitive Psychology Cognitive psychologists hypothesized that second language acquisition, like other learning, requires the learner’s attention and effort. Some theories suggested that language is fist acquired through intentional learning of what is called ‘declarative knowledge’ and that the declarative knowledge can become ‘procedural knowledge’
  • 30. 5- Integrationist Perspectives This theory explains the ongoing use of language and gestures in anticipation of how the other will react in a conversation. It’s not only the speakers reactions but also the listeners.
  • 31. Instruction and Second Language Acquisition Research shows that instruction can have a significant effect on second language acquisition, at least in terms of the rate of learning and the long-term success that learner achieve in using the language accurately. In the context of communicative interaction, learners seem to be able to benefit more form instruction and error feedback which focus on semantic or lexical errors than from that which targets syntactic errors.
  • 34. 1-AGE Second language acquisition is influenced by the age of the learner. Children with solid literacy skills in their own language, seem to be in the best position to acquire a new language efficiently.
  • 35. 2-PERSONALITY Introverted or anxious learners usually make slower progress, particularly in the development of oral skills. They are less likely to take opportunities to speak. They will take risks, and thus will give themselves much more practice.
  • 36. 3-EXPERIENCES Learners who have acquired general knowledge and experience are in a stronger position to develop a new language than those who haven't.
  • 37. 4-MOTIVATION •Intrinsic motivation: Refers to motivation that comes from inside an individual rather than from any external or outside rewards, such as money or grades. Extrinsic motivation : refers to motivation that comes from outside an individual. The motivating factors are external, or outside, rewards such as money or grades. These rewards provide satisfaction and pleasure that the task itself may not provide.
  • 38. 5-COGNITION In general, it seems that students with greater cognitive abilities will make the faster progress. Some linguists believe that there is a specific, innate language learning ability that is stronger in some students than in others. How much wood would a woodchuck chuck, if a woodchuck could chuck wood?
  • 39. AFFECTIVE FACTORS Affective factors are emotional factors which influence learning. 1.Self-Esteem 2.Inhibition 3.Risk Taking 4.Anxiety 5.Empathy
  • 40. Comparison between 1st & 2nd language Acquisition
  • 41. Similarities 1-In both first and second language acquisition, there are predictable stages, and particular structures are acquired in a set order. Individuals may move more slowly or quickly through these stages, but they cannot skip ahead. 2-In both first and second language acquisition, making errors is a part of learning. For example, a learner may start out using the correct form of an irregular verb as part of a language chunk, but later over-generalize and place a regular affix on that same verb.
  • 42. 3-In both first and second language acquisition, the learner uses context clues, prior knowledge, and interaction to comprehend language. 4-And in both first and second language acquisition, Age is an important variable affecting proficiency.
  • 43. Differences 1-In first language acquisition, children spend several years listening to language, babbling, and using telegraphic speech before they can form sentences. But in second language acquisition in older learners, learning is more rapid and people are able to form sentences within a shorter period of time. 2-In second language learning in older learners, learners are able to use more metacognitive processes in their learning. They can consciously analyze and manipulate grammatical structures, and they can describe how language works. This can speed the learning process.
  • 44. 3-In second language learning in older learners, learners bring more life experience and background knowledge to their learning. They have more schemata and more learning strategies to help them learn the second language. 4-Almost everyone acquires a first language, but not everyone acquires a second language. Acquiring a first language happens naturally, while acquiring a second language often requires conscious effort on the part of the learner.
  • 45. 3-Production Language production is the production of spoken & written language. It describes all stages between having a concept into linguistic form.
  • 46. SPEECH PRODUCTION • It concerns with how people produce language in his/her mind to convey their meanings that are comprehensible to others either it is in written form or spoken form • Basically it refers that how humans use words to communicate ideas and feelings and how such communication are understood. • In simple wording it is how the brain creates and understands language
  • 47. Sub-Levels Of Speech Production There are four sub-levels in speech production Conceptualization Formulation Articulation Self-Monitoring
  • 48. 1-Conceptualization This is what we wish to communicate.  Example:-  People who are coming from different cultures but using same language like (English).  We have to notice that how clearly do they say and what they mean.
  • 49. Levelt’s Model • A psycholinguist who gave a model in 1989 • CONCEPTUALIZATION ( what we wish to communicate) • FORMULATION ( formulate the thoughts into linguistic plan) • ARTICULATION (execute the plan through the biological speech system) • SELF-MONITORING (monitor the speech whether it is what we intend to say and how we intend to say)
  • 50. David McNeil's Model • An American psycholinguist who gave this model. • He focus on speech first conceptualized in human mind. • He claimed that syntactic thoughts and imagistic thoughts collaborate to conceptualize conversation. • • SPEECH CONCEPTUALIZATION • Syntactic thoughts • Imagistic thoughts • Example:- • Person A:Where is my brief case? • Person B:There’s your brief case. • This is when person B point to the brief case the same when he says:thers’s.
  • 51. Insights of production process There are three insights of production process: 1. It demonstrates that speakers are constantly self editing. 2. It suggests that speakers are intuitively sensitive to what stage of production process went awry, if indeed a mistake was made. 3. There is a distinction between performance and competence. Examples : 1. I think it costs just about…uh..twenty five dollars. 2. They have to try to…uh…contact an attorney.  Hostiations like those exemplified in (1)and (2) are not mistake certainly not in the sense that the term has been defined and illustrate here.
  • 52. 2-Formulation • Formulation is the eventual output of speech conceptualization. • Gestures plays a functional role in formulation of speech. • Long term memory resources are thought to be necessary for conceptualization and verbal working memory resources are thought to necessary for formulation.
  • 53. Formulation is related to slips of tongue in speech production.
  • 54. Spoonerism This term is introduced by Dr.William Spooner(1844-1930) Spoonerisms are Speech error in which the initial letter or letters of two or more words are switched. 8 major types of slips of the tongue  These errors appear at all levels phoneme, morpheme & word level.
  • 55. Example That’s so she'll be ready in case she decide to hits it(decides to hits it). Fancy getting your model renosed(getting your nose remodeled) Bake my bike(take my bike) He pulled a pantrum(tantrum) Type 1-Shift 2-Exchange 3-Anticipation 4-Preseveration
  • 56. I didn’t explain this clarefully enough(carefully) I’ll just get up & mutter intelligibly(unintelligibly) At slow speed it’s too light (heavy) That’s child looking to be spaddled (paddled/spanked) 5-Addition 6-Deletion 7-Substituion 8-Blend
  • 57. 3-Articulation • Articulation concerned with sounds in speech production,when,where and how sounds are articulate in the mouth and vocals of a human. • It includes “Place of Articulation” & “Manner of Articulation”
  • 58. Place of Articulation • It is the place where obstruction occurs in the vocal tracts. • It includes; • The upper lip (Bilabial sounds) • The upper teeth, either on the edge of the teeth or inner surface (Dental sounds) • The alveolar ridge, the gum line just behind the teeth.(Alveolar sounds) Manner of Articulation • The manner of articulation is the configuration and interaction of the articulators. • It includes; • Stops • Fricatives
  • 59. • The back of the alveolar ridge.(Post alveolar sounds) • The hard palate in the roof of mouth.(Palatal Sounds) • The soft palate back on the roof of the mouth.(Velar sounds) • The epiglottis at the entrance to the windpipe.(Glottal sounds) • Affricates • Nasals • Flaps • Lateral • Approximants
  • 60. Articulation includes consonant sounds as well as vowel sounds, vowel sounds includes short vowels & long vowels.
  • 61. 4-Self-monitoring  Production process sometime goes away and Speaker will verbally misstep, especially with regular or more unusual form. Examples : 1. The last I knowed about it(I mean knew about it),it had left Vancouver. 2. She was so drank(I mean drunk ),that we decided to drive her home. Mistakes are production problems, they that are trouble you have with your linguistic printer , not with the original software. Errors are committed by non-native speaker.
  • 62. Examples : 3. I think it cost just…uh…about twenty five dollars. 4. They have …uh…to try to contact an attorney.  Just about, and have to function as linguistic units, so it is improbable that the speaker would hesitate in the middle of either one, after having already chosen to fill the linguistic slot of the utterance with those phrases.  The attested presence of a self monitoring stage that people don’t just communicate with themselves, they don’t just listen to others, they listen to themselves.
  • 64. Definition of Comprehension • The word comprehension means understanding . • Comprehension actually comes from Latin term. • An ability to understand the meaning or impotence of something [or knowledge acquire as a result.
  • 65. 1-Sound Comprehension • Comprehension is strongly influenced by even the slightest of changes in discourse which the listener is attending to. • In the course of every day conversation we don’t hear vowels and consonant as isolated sounds • The [p] is the following words is produced slightly different the initial [p] of pool pronounced with puckered lips but the same [p] in peel is spoken with the lip spread • Despite all variations in [p] native speakers of English almost never confuse any manifestation of the [p] sound with [b] which is acoustically similar. • Example these sound Benny and penny.
  • 66. The main feature which English speakers attend to is the [Voice onset Timing] [VOT] of initial consonant the most significant difference English consonant like [b]and [p] is the length of time. Psycholinguistic have discovered that human are actually born with the ability to focus in on VOT differences in the speech sounds. The successful comprehension is a combination of the innate ability to recognize fine distinctions between speech and sounds which all human appear to possess along with the ability all learner have to adjust their acoustic categories to the parameters of the language .
  • 67. 2-Word Comprehension Definition: The word comprehension means understanding. When you lack comprehension of a difficult word, you will likely need to look up its definition and usage in a cool, down-to-earth online dictionary! Comprehension actually comes from the Latin term, comprehension, which means "a seizing. “
  • 68. Representation of the Meaning of Words Comprehension • Reference Theory • Prototype Theory • Decomposition Theory
  • 69. 1-Reference Theory: which equates a word’s meaning with what that word refers to in the world For example, the noun drawer is identified with a sliding box-shaped part of a piece of furniture used for storage. 2-Prototype Theory: Assumes that a word’s meaning can be derived from a bundle of features, no one of which is individually either necessary or sufficient. 3-Decomposition Theory: which holds that the Meaning of an utterance can be derived if the latter is broken down into its component semantic features.
  • 70. 3-Sentence Comprehension • Sentence comprehension is known as to be difficult for orally trained individual with hearing impairment. • Sentence comprehension has to deal with ambiguity in spoken and written utterance e.g: lexical, structural and semantic ambiguities.  Some Psycholinguists have focused on fact that the sentence comprehension system continually creates novel, representation of novel messages, following the constraints of a language grammar and does so in a remarkable speed.  some emphasized that comprehension system is senstive to a vast range of information including grammatical, lexical and textual.
  • 71. In 1950’s Chomsky gave a model of sentence grammar structure of the basis of which Psycholinguists first began to examine the comprehension of sentences. In 1982 & 1992 Frazier, Rayner and Pretchett (former theorists) have constructed serial model that describes that how a processor quickly constructs one or more representation of sentence based on restricted range of information. In 1994 McDonald, Pearlmutter and seidenberg have constructed parallel model describing how processor use all relevent information to quickly evaluates the full range of interpretations of a sentence.
  • 72. Here are some examples • Tom is not going to your school. • The man who ate at my house last night. • Tommy is coming to your pool. • Dog is chasing the cat. • The cat is being chased by dog.