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A Unified Model for L1 and L2. Brian MacWhinney HKIEd, Carnegie Mellon. Thanks to . Elizabeth Bates Michèle Kail Kerry Kilborn Csaba Pléh Klaus Köpcke Maryellen MacDonald Julia Evans Natasha Tokowicz Ovid Tzeng Ping Li Igor Farkas Arturo Hernandez
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A Unified Model for L1 and L2 • Brian MacWhinney • HKIEd, Carnegie Mellon
Thanks to ... • Elizabeth Bates Michèle Kail Kerry Kilborn • Csaba Pléh Klaus Köpcke Maryellen MacDonald • Julia Evans Natasha Tokowicz Ovid Tzeng • Ping Li Igor Farkas Arturo Hernandez • Yoshinori Sasaki Richard Wong Antonella Devescovi • Reinhold Kliegl Jeff Sokolov Beverly Wulfeck • Vera Kempe Janet McDonald Hasan Taman • Elena Pizzuto Stan Smith Dan Slobin • Roman Taraban Patricia Brooks Zhou Jing • Yuki Yoshimura Melita Kovacevic Joe Stemberger • Chris Jones Jared Leinbach Christophe Parisse • Yvan Rose Kees De Bot Phil Pavlik • Nora Presson Yanping Dong Anat Prior • Yanhui Zhang Sue-mei Wu • NIMH (25 years) NSF (10 years) MacArthur (3 years)
Economic Assumptions • Competence in English is crucial for success in the global economy. • But most of the population of the world does not speak English as L1. So English is L2. Other L2s have parallel roles. • It is not enough to restrict L2 competence to the elite, since work is becoming increasingly based on language skills. • Different social and economic configurations will require differing levels of L2 competence.
Position 1: Early Immersion • There is a Critical Period for language learning. • There is a learning/acquisition dichotomy. Late bilinguals can never achieve full L2 competence. • Therefore, we must start immersion L2 programs at the pre-primary level. • And spend billions of dollars in exposure, but not really teaching.
Position 2: Focus on community • There is a Critical Period and a learning/acquisition dichotomy. • However, immersion will not work and can conflict with other goals in early childhood education. • Pre-college education should be in the native language. • Full bilingualism is only possible if the community becomes bilingual.
Position 3: Focus on quality • There is no critical period for second language learning, although there are important age effects. • Critical period effects are due to entrenchment and competition. • What is important is not the timing of learning, but the quality of exposure. • We may still need billions of dollars, but in teaching, not just exposure. • Languages can be learnt and taught. There is no real learning/acquisition dichotomy.
The Positions • Position 1 -- UG: Chomsky, Lenneberg, Krashen, Long, Hurford, Pinker, Newport, Meisel • Position 2 -- Sociolinguistics: Fishman, Swain, Ervin-Tripp, Gumperz • Position 3 -- Emergentism: Bates, Ellis, Bialystok, Snow, MacWhinney, Ringbom
7 Pillars of UG • Critical Period -- today’s focus • Grammar Gene • Speech is Special • Modularity • Poverty of the Stimulus • Sudden Evolution of Language • Centrality of Recursion
7 pillars of emergentism • L1-L2 competition and entrenchment • Gradual evolution • Modules are made not born • Polygenic emergent genome • Speech relies on mammalian abilities • Learning on input • Emergence of recursion
Entrenchment vs. Critical Periods • Critical Periods are linked to infancy. • Observed drop is not precipitous. • Lateralization is not linked to CP. • Language is not a unitary ability. • Golf, ballet are also age-related. • No mechanism has been discovered. • UG-related syntactic patterns are not strongly fossilized - Birdsong
Critical Periods • Bee dance, cricket song • Does the ability need a trigger? • When does it start and end?
L1 CP≠ L2 CP L’enfant Sauvage by François Truffaut Truffaut as Dr. Jean Itard
How many CPs? • 6 mos -- deaf children • 2 -- Early bilingual impacts • 5 -- Output phonology Flege • 8 -- Korean adoptees, literacy, orthography • 13 -- Hemispherectomies, synaptic pruning • 15 -- Shift in learning, growth of strategies • 20 -- Beginning of decline • 40 -- Social difficulties
Where is the critical drop? • Newport & Johnson Hakuta actual
What we know • Critical periods are basic to embryology. • Critical periods for binocular vision in cats; periods for exposure to song in birds; precocial bird attachment; • Animals have many instincts; but is language an instinct? • Kuhl and Werker: brain locks in on early sounds • Bosch, Juszyck: Auditory system builds early contrasts • Rosenzweig rats in rich environments get bigger brains.
A bridge too far • No evidence for early brain effects • Mozart for babies • Linda Acredolo and Baby Signs • Mobiles, language while you sleep • Suzuki method • There is nothing wrong with early L2 learning, but no evidence that it is indispensable • Early bilingualism ≠ Early L2 learning
Multiple language abilities • Bulgarian grad student who wrote at the top of the class, but had a noticeable accent. • Hungarian diplomat with perfect English, but nothing to say. • Japanese grad student with perfect interaction and comprehension, but impossible definite articles and slow test-taking. • Fossilization for specific German nouns vs. fossilization for some past tenses.
How can we decide? • Neurological evidence for a Critical Period • Immigrant studies • Proof of success in native acquisition for age of arrival well past the Critical Period. • Proof of failure after some early age of arrival. • L2 Classroom studies • Big correlational analyses (questionable method) • Randomized clinical trials (if we could get funding) • Microgenetic method studies (my current preference) • experiments -- can we teach r/l? • online methods • TalkBank video methods
Mechanisms of UG • Genes • Modules • Principles, Parameters, Rules
Mechanisms of Emergence • Entrainment, physical and social • Adaptation, selection • Competition, strength, reinforcement • Maps, topology, short connections • Self-organized criticality • Resonance • Homeostasis, homeorhesis, feedback
Why the shift to emergentism? • Without advanced methods, emergentist cognitive science was not possible • We didn’t have CHILDES, TalkBank • Audio, video analysis was primitive • We couldn’t simulate - PDP, SOM, ART • We couldn’t image the brain - ERP, fMRI • We couldn’t study learning in vivo - PSLC. • With these advances, emergentism is becoming the default stance.
Unified Competition Model competition chunking maps buffers resonance transfer codes mental models
L1 and L2 • The learning goals are the same. • The available mental processes are the same. • However, the specific challenges are different.
L1 Learning Challenges • Segmenting out words • Organizing phonological gestures • Bootstrapping syntax • Conversational sequencing
L2 Challenges • Maximizing positive transfer • Avoiding negative transfer • Overcoming age effects • Using resonance to overcome entrenchment • Proceduralizing declarative structures - Ullman/Paradis
Component Theories • Competition interactive activation, Bayes • Maps SOM, entrenchment • Transfer A relation between maps • Chunking chunking theory, fluency • Buffers processing load, CAPS • Resonance memory theory, Pimsleur, coding • Mental model perspective, embodiment • Codes sociolinguistics, identification
1. Cue Competition • Whodunit? • The tiger pushes the bear. • The bear the tiger pushes. • Pushes the tiger the bear. • The dogs the eraser push. • The dogs the eraser pushes. • The cat push the dogs. • Il gatto spingono i cani.
Cues vary across languages • English: The pig loves the farmer • SV > VO > Agreement • German: Das Schwein liebt den Bauer. • Den Bauer liebt das Schwein • Case > Agreement > Animacy>Word Order • Spanish: El cerdo quiere al campesino. • Al campesino le quiere el cerdo. • "Case" > Agreement > Clitic > Animacy > Word Order
Device Example Cues Word Order the dog chases the cat Function words der - die - das Affixes was tak-en Clitics nous, le, ba Constructions the more -- the merrier
Central Claim • Cue validity predicts cue strength • (Bayesian statistics) • [p(function)|form] - comprehension • [p(form)|function] - production • Cue validity measured in corpora • Cue strength measured in experiments
Cues Compete The bear the tigers chases. “Tigers”-as-Agent “Bear”-as-Agent competes preverbal position SV agreement Initial Position
L1/L2 Competition I often go ... / Je vais souvent ... V + Adv Adv + V competes speaking English: speaking French: ADV 1st ADV 2nd Heavy Adv
English L1, Dutch L2 Dissertations by Janet McDonald and Kerry Kilborn
Findings - 22 studies • Validity predicts Strength. • Children and L2 learners pick up frequent cues first, then they settle on reliable cues. • For timed tasks, strong fast cues dominate. • L2 learners attempt transfer, but then learn cues, as in L1. They gradually reach L1 levels of cue strength.
2. Maps • Maps are central to the processing theory. They control transfer, entrenchment, and embodied encoding. • Maps are emergent: • Neural systems: Jacobs & Jordan 1992 • Children: Karmiloff-Smith 1997 • Robots: Nolfi 1996, Tani 2002
Self-organizing lexical maps Li, Farkas, MacWhinney - Neural network - computer simulation - L1 lexical learning - CHILDES input - no initial organization - short connections
Gradual Emergence 50, 150, 250, 500 words
Word Form Phonological Bilingual self-organization Phonological Map ENGLISH PHONOLOGY Self-organization CHINESE PHONOLOGY ASSOCIATIVE CONNECTIONS (Hebbian learning) Word Meaning Co-occurrence-based representation (derived from separate component exposed to bilingual corpus) Self-organization CHCHINESE SEMANTICS ENGLISH SEMANTICS Semantic Map Chinese Phonology Chinese Semantics
Maps implement entrenchment • Strong items dominate over weak. • Late L2 items are parasitic on pre-existing L1 forms and maps
Module Entrenchment Simultaneous Bilingualism LX LY balanced Successive Bilingualism L1 L2 dominates