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1. Lecture: Psycholinguistics Professor Dr. Neal R. Norrick_____________________________________ Psycholinguistics Universität des Saarlandes
Dept. 4.3: English Linguistics
SS 2009
4. C. Subordinate: L2 acquired based on L1
only one system
person functions as monolingual only in L1
person experiences interference only from
L1 to L2
6.
10. 7.4.3 Bilingual phonology and syntax
Extended system hypothesis:
phonemes of L2 are processed as allophones of
L1 phonemes
Dual system hypothesis:
separate phonemic systems for L1 & L2
Tripartite system hypothesis:
shared phonemes in one system with separate
phonemes in separate systems
11. Stop consonants p t k, b d g could be shared in
bilingual German-English system
but English fricatives in then and thin, and German
fricatives in ich and ach must occur in separate
systems
Similarly:
syntactic structures of L2 could be processed in
accordance with L1 syntax
L1 & L2 could have separate syntactic systems
12. shared structures could be processed the same while separate structures would require separate processing
e.g. German & English NPs could be processed
similarly with special processing for German
preposed participles like:
das von der Kandidatin gewählte Thema
13. 7.4.4 Language processing in the bilingual brain
Depending how they're acquired, L1 & L2 may even
be lateralized differently in brain:
L2 lateralized in right hemisphere
L2 less lateralized than L1
L1 & L2 both less lateralized than in monolinguals
evidence from aphasia indicates that languages are
separately organized in brain, but not necessary
lateralized separately
14. As Paradis (1979, 1985) shows, bilinguals comes in
many types;
Bilinguals may differ with regard to:
manner of acquisition (formal, informal)
mode of acquisition (oral, written)
method of acquisition
(deductive, inductive, analytic, global)
age of acquisition (during or after critical period)
stage of acquisition
degree of proficiency
15. frequency and modes of use
language-specific features of L1 & L2
sharing features and rules at various levels
on every linguistic level, structures might be
shared or separate
e.g. if L1 speaker produces L2 perfectly, except for
phonetics, i.e. has lots of interference from L1 to L2
at the level of phonetics, we could model the
situation as follows:
16. L1 L2
conceptual level single system
semantics x -- y
syntax x -- y
morphology x -- y
lexis x -- y
phonology x -- y
17. and if L1 speaker produces phonetically correct L2,
but makes lots of interference errors in grammar
and word choice, we could model the situation as
follows:
L1 L2
conceptual level single system
semantics x -- y
syntax x -- y
morphology x -- y
lexis x -- y
phonology x -- y
22. But, as in Weinreich, theres no way in these models
to account for interference
Since there's interference between the systems,
some pipes may be playing a role in both L1 & L2
systems, and the pipes must be leaky; since we can
code-switch and translate, there must be leakage in
both directions
Its probably necessary to complicate the third
model
23. The tanks of words from L1 or L2, need valves to turn
them on or shut them off, representing the decision to
speak either L1 or L2 and block out the other
As we saw above, the words must flow into separate
sets of pipes, representing the grammar, morphology
and phonology of either L1 or L2 as well; but some
pipes serve both L1 & L2 systems to some extent,
to account for interference
At all levels, we must allow leakage to explain how
we can code-switch from L1 to L2
24. also possible:
comprehension is a single system for L1 & L2,
while production of L1 & L2 remains separate, because:
comprehension precedes production in acquisition
comprehension more advanced than production at
all stages
though we can choose not to speak L1 or L2,
we can't choose not to comprehend
production is lost before comprehension in aphasia
comprehension returns before production in aphasia
25. again according to Paradis, we can envision:
single coherent underlying conceptual system
two cognitively separate systems - with some
shared areas in semantics, syntax, phonology
one system is suppressed due to context, frequency
of contact etc
but word/phrase from suppressed system may intrude,
especially during word search
there may be differences in processing due to
acquisition history, strategies etc
26. 8. Language comprehension
? means understanding what we hear and read
comprehension as active search for coherence and
sense based on expectations arising from context,
not a passive item-by-item recording and analysis of
words in a linear sequence.
27. meaning and real-world expectations play a more
important role than grammar
top-down versus bottom-up processing
Until the age of four, kids interpret a-d the same way;
even adults require longer to respond to c, d:
a. The cat chased the mouse.
b. The mouse was chased by the cat.
c. The mouse chased the cat.
d. The cat was chased by the mouse.
29. Asked if they saw any difference between g and their
incorrect paraphrase h, 53% still said no
h. If you print that, I'll sue you.
clearly, the Reality Principle guides our
comprehension of linguistic structures
31.
35. 8.2 Comprehension of words
Parallel Distributed Processing (PDP):
separate, simultaneous and parallel processes work
to identify words
36. by pronunciation: to recognize homophones
leadN and ledV pst
by spelling: to recognize homographs
windN and windV
by grammar: to recognize smell as noun or verb
while hear can only function as verb
by semantics: synonyms like little and small
antonyms like little and big
hyponyms like car versus vehicle etc
37. PDP can link word meanings to perceptual and
functional paradigms (how a thing looks, sounds etc,
what it's used for)
consider Tip-of-the-tongue (TOT) phenomena
you're trying to recall the word for the belief that life's
events are preordained by a deity
you remember that the word begins with p, then that
word begins with pre-, and that it ends with -tion
38. Bathtub Effect: recall is best for beginnings and
ends of words, like the head and feet of a person
which are visible though the middle remains
submerged in the tub
you recall associated words like:
predilection pretension
Presbyterian preordained
you finally come up with: predestination
39. Spreading activation networks: as the search
progresses, more words and concepts are accessed
related in various ways,
including schematic knowledge
e.g. the association of Presbyterian
and predestination via 'religion
Both comprehension and production of both speech
and writing require accessing the mental lexicon.
Garman (1990: 249) diagrams input-output relations
as following: