First language acquisition. LING 200 Spring 2006

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First language acquisition LING 200 Spring 2006

Overview Questions about first language acquisition (L1) Characteristics of L1 Theories of L1 L1 and innateness hypothesis

First language acquisition How is it that by age 5 children (basically) know their language? What they do along the way and why? An example of what is so impressive about L1 (clip from Acquiring Language) (acquisition.mov)

Characteristics of L1 Regular stages, or milestones Babbling: 4-20 months One-word stage: 12-18 months Two-word stage: apx. 24 months

Babbling 0-1 months: crying, coughing 2-3 months: cooing and gooing (production of velar consonants) 4-6 months: produce greater variety of sounds, sounds more like language 7-9 months: CV syllables, often reduplicated; e.g. [tata] canonical babbling 12 months: relatively long sequences of gibberish, possibly with intonation (12-13 months: first words) 18-20 months: babbling ceases

Characteristics of early babbling Largely independent of what sounds are heard in child s lgs environment Everybody babbles deaf children babble hearing children of deaf parents babble

Characteristics of later babbling Language specific differences begin to emerge Japanese babies: word final [/] common Spanish babies produce longer words French babies produce more nasals ASL babies: produce ASL-like movement

One-word stage Emerges around 12-18 months Characteristics words used as sentences incipient word meaning; typical communicative functions: naming child's action child s desire for action child s emotion simple phonology: CV syllables; CVCV words

Words known by Eve at 15 months Mommy Daddy go go? gimme baba grandma dollie cup what? wawa water nana blanket

Production vs. comprehension At all(?) stages of L1, production lags behind comprehension Recognition of polite forms precedes the ability to produce them. Puppets requesting candy used direct forms like: Give me candy. Or indirect forms like: I would like some candy. May I have some candy? Indirect forms were judged more polite.

Production vs. comprehension Recognition of sounds precedes the ability to produce them. One of us...spoke to a child who called his inflated plastic fish a fis. In imitation of the child s pronunciation, the observer said: This is your fis? No, said the child, my fis. He continued to reject the adult s imitation until he was told, That is your fish. Yes, he said, my fis. Recognition of meaning conveyed by word order precedes ability to produce long sentences. Another clip from Acquiring Language (bigbird.mov)

2-word stage Emerges few months after 1-word stage Characteristics short (2-word) sentences no inflectional affixes (e.g. genitive, 3sS -s) minimal use of syntactic function words (e.g. determiners) pronouns rare

Eve at 18 months more grape juice drink juice eating no celery Mommy soup open toybox Oh! Horsie stuck write a paper my pencil What doing, Mommy? Mommy head?

Beyond 2-word stage: Eve at 27 months Pronouns and other pro-forms Igo get a pencil n write. Put my pencil in there. You make a blue one for me. Just like Mommy has, and David has, and Sara has. Embedded sentences I put them in the refrigerator to freeze. Determiners and auxiliaries What is that on the table? We re going to make a blue house.

Eve at 27 months Omission of be See, this one_better but this_not better. There_some cream. Wrong form of pronoun Put in you coffee. Wrong verb forms They was in the refrigerator, cooking. That why Jacky comed. Omission of determiner How bout another eggnog instead of_cheese sandwich?

Some theories of L1 Reinforcement hypothesis Imitation hypothesis Active construction of grammar hypothesis

Against Reinforcement hypothesis Children don't get a lot of corrections some lexical/content corrections not a lot of grammatical corrections Children don't absorb a lot of the corrections they do hear:

Child: Mother: Child:... Mother: Child: Nobody don t like me. No. Say nobody likes me. Nobody don t like me.... Now listen carefully. Say nobody LIKES me. Oh...Nobody don t LIKES me.

Against Imitation hypothesis Children produce novel utterances (not in imitation of adult productions) other one spoon causatives: 'you're fedding me up' These flowers are sneezing me! novel verbs Why you didn t jam my bread? I hate you and I ll never unhate you or nothing! Put me that broom. Let s get brooming.

Child: Adult: Child: Adult: Child: Adult: Child: My teacher holded the baby rabbits and we patted them. Did you say your teacher held the baby rabbits? Yes. What did you say she did? She holded the baby rabbits and we patted them. Did you say she held them tightly? No, she holded them loosely.

Grammar construction hypothesis Children make systematic, not random, errors In phonology. Inventory of English consonants (age 2): p b t d k g f m w s n h

Inventory of English consonants, age 4 p b t d č æ k g f v s z š h m n N l w r y

More systematic errors in phonology child [gu] here mummy [gib] me [lili] take [m næn ] adult target glue give little banana child s rule no C clusters syll-final Cs are stops no syllabic consonants Cs in word must be all oral or all nasal

Systematic errors in morphology Regularization of plurals gooses Regularization of past tense forms of verbs heared, hitted, goed, bringed, comed; I tooked it smaller Regularization of comparative forms of adjectives: He hitted me. He s a puncher he is. He s being badder and badder.

Systematic semantic errors Underextension (narrowing, hyponymy) child s word car dish mow-mow first referent (no extensions) family Pontiac child s dish family cat

Systematic semantic errors Overextension (broadening, hypernymy) child s word fly koko wauwau first referent housefly rooster crowing dog extensions specks of dirt, dust, all small insects, child s own toes, crumbs, small toad piano, phonograph, tunes played on violin, accordian, all music, merrygo-round toy dog, soft slippers, picture of old man in furs, all animals

Syntactic errors May resemble well-formed sentences in other languages A clip from Acquiring the human language, childerror1.mov

L1 and Innateness hypothesis Innateness Hypothesis Humans are equipped with Universal Grammar, or are genetically programmed for language. UG severely constrains the possible form that a human language may take. The actual form of language is determined by environment/language experience. UG and L1. Clip from Acquiring Language, elgin.mov

Characteristics of innate behaviors Innate behavior (e.g. walking) Emerges before needed. Not the result of a conscious decision. Not triggered by (extraordinary) external events. cf. L1 Speed of learning L1 ( age 5) Needed for L1: immersion in lgc environ. Poverty of stimulus : Children exposed to motherese, adult performance

innate behavior Not affected by explicit instruction. Normal stages of achievement can be identified. Critical age for the acquisition of the behavior L1 correction has no effect cross-linguistic regularities in learning; uniformity of resulting grammars (UG); lg development independent of intelligence, other cognitive skills critical age L1 cases: Genie, Chelsea, Maria Noname, etc.

Critical age: L1 vs. L2 Children are able to completely master a first language, whereas adults rarely do: L1 lack of instruction speed of learning uniformity of resulting grammars regular stages L2 overt instruction slowness of learning lack of uniformity of resulting grammars no defined stages

Chimp studies Results of attempts to teach chimps English, ASL, manipulation of symbols chimps are capable of learning some aspects of human language chimps show some spontaneity, creativity don't get past 2-3 word stage; skills comparable to 1-2 year old child limited syntax. Trouble with: word order structure dependent operations (e.g. conjunction) chimps are not predisposed to learn human language; lack latent capacity for human language

Acquisition summary Characteristics of first language acquisition suggest that language is an innate behavior. There is a Critical Period for the acquisition of a first language (critical age cases, L1 vs. L2 differences) Children do not learn grammar solely by imitation or reinforcement; they learn by working out rules for themselves.