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Chapter 8 Language & Thinking. Language. Communication: the sending and receiving of information Language: the primary mode of communication among humans A systematic way of communicating information using symbols and rules for combining them Speech: oral expression of language
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Language • Communication: the sending and receiving of information • Language: the primary mode of communication among humans • A systematic way of communicating information using symbols and rules for combining them • Speech: oral expression of language • Approximately 5,000 spoken languages exist today.
Do Animals Use Language? • Since 1930s, numerous attempts have been made to teach language to a few select species. • The most appropriate conclusion to draw: • Nonhuman species show no capacity to produce language on their own, but • Certain species can be taught to produce languagelike communication.
Infants Born Prepared to Learn Language • Language acquisition – learning vs. inborn capacities • Behaviorism’s language theory • People speak as they do because they have been reinforced for doing so. • Behaviorists assumed children were relatively passive. • The problem with this theory is that it does not fit the evidence. • Operant conditioning principles do not play the primary role in language development.
Infants Born Prepared to Learn Language • The nativist perspective: • Language development proceeds according to an inborn program. • Language Acquisition Device (Noam Chomsky): humans are born with specialized brain structures (Language Acquisition Device) that facilitates the learning of language. • Interactionist perspectives: • Propose environmental and biological factors interact together to affect the course of language development. • Socialinteractionist perspective strongly influenced by Lev Vygotsky’s writings
Infants Born Prepared to Learn Language • Assessing the three perspectives on language acquisition: • General consensus: • Behaviorists place too much emphasis on conditioning principles. • Nativists don’t give enough credit to environmental influences. • Interactionist approaches may offer best possible solution.
The Linguistic Relativity Hypothesis • Does language determine thought? • Benjamin Lee Whorf’s linguistic relativity hypothesis • Proposed that the structure of language determines the structure of thought (without a word to describe an experience, you cannot think about it). • However, research indicates that just because a language lacks terms for stimuli does not mean that language users cannot perceive features of the stimuli. • The answer is no. Most psychologists believe in a weaker version of Whorf’s hypothesis—that language can influence thinking.
Thinking • Thinking—cognition • The mental activity of knowing • The processes through which knowledge is acquired • The processes through which problems are solved
Concept Formation • Concept: a mental grouping of objects, ideas, or events that share common properties • Concepts enable people to store memories in an organized fashion. • Categorization is the process of forming concepts. • We form some concepts by identifying defining features. • Problem with forming concepts by definition is that many familiar concepts have uncertain or fuzzy boundaries.
Concept Formation • Thus, categorizing has less to do with features that define all members of a concept and has more to do with features that characterize the typical member of a concept. • The most representative members of a concept are known as prototypes.
Fuzzy Boundaries • Determine whether something belongs to a group by comparing it with the prototype. • Objects accepted and rejected define the boundaries of the group or concept. • This is different for different people.
Problem-Solving Strategies • Common problem-solving strategies: • Trial and error: trying one possible solution after another until one works • Algorithm: following a specific rule or step-by-step procedure that inevitably produces the correct solution • Heuristic: following a general rule of thumb to reduce the number of possible solutions • Insight: sudden realization of how a problem can be solved
“Internal” Obstacles Can Impede Problem Solving • Confirmation bias: the tendency to seek information that supports our beliefs, while ignoring disconfirming information • Mental set: the tendency to continue using solutions that have worked in the past, even though a better alternative may exist • Functional fixedness: the tendency to think of objects as functioning in fixed and unchanging ways and ignoring other less obvious ways in which they might be used
Decision-Making Heuristics • Representativeness heuristic: • the tendency to make decisions based on how closely an alternative matches (or represents) a particular prototype • Availability heuristic: • the tendency to judge the frequency or probability of an event in terms of how easy it is to think of examples of that event
Decision-Making Heuristics Five conditions most likely to lead to heuristic use: • People don’t have time to engage in systematic analysis. • People are overloaded with information. • People consider issues to be not very important. • People have little information to use in making a decision. • Something about the situation primesa given heuristic.