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L1 Acquisition—12 -36 months

L1 Acquisition—12 -36 months. Stages of First Language Acquisition—12 months on. Holophrastic stage — 12-24 months idiomorphs mutual exclusivity and whole object bias overgeneralizations, undergeneralizations referential vs. expressive children Two-word Stage — 24-30 months

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L1 Acquisition—12 -36 months

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  1. L1 Acquisition—12 -36 months

  2. Stages of First Language Acquisition—12 months on • Holophrastic stage — 12-24 months • idiomorphs • mutual exclusivity and whole object bias • overgeneralizations, undergeneralizations • referential vs. expressive children • Two-word Stage — 24-30 months • Subject-verb ‘Mary go.’ • Verb-modifier ‘Push truck.’ • Possessor-possesed ‘Mommy sock’ • Content words, no function words • Telegraphic Stage — 30-36 months • 2-5 words with little extra morphology • Morphological overgeneralization • Easier, more productive morphemes first

  3. Basic methods for studying children post linguistically • Observations • Wug tests • ERPs (Event related potentials) • Experimental trickery

  4. 1. Observations Many of these studies done in 1950’s – 70’s Usually linguists or psychologists would follow own children around with tape recorder and analyze their language development

  5. 1. Observations At 1 year; 1 month (babbling) (in IPA): Production Production /ava/ /baewa/ /aelu/ /daevu/ /aw/ /gigi/ /n/ /paba/ At 1 year, 6 months: Gloss Production Gloss Production baby /bebi/ go /go/ bear /baeu/ big /gIg/ bib /bIb/ Brenda /pEnt/ blue /pu/ walk /wak/

  6. M: Did you tell Daddy what you had for tea? N: aga (eggs) and gagadoodoodoo (cockadoodledoo = cornflakes [because of the picture on the box] cockadoodledoo also means a weathervane on a church spire and so he remembers his walk as well) tika (sticks) too. M: You didn’t have cornflakes for tea! And you didn’t have sticks either! N: ho (holes) too. (laughing—thinking this is a joke) M: You didn’t have sticks and holes for tea! N: doba (toast) Go wakin’, dada. (“I went walking, daddy”) F: What did you see on your walk? N: see ka (“I saw a car”) F: Yes, you went for a ride in a car, didn’t you? What else did you see? N: piti dedi mamma on gara (“a pretty flower (daisy) for momma in the garden”). [The flower wasn’t a daisy, but he calls all flowers daisies] (Parents get N. ready for bed) N: Help? Need help? (meaning “I need help). M: What is it you can’t find? Is it something under there? N, looking under couch: ba (“a ball”) (Later, looking at a book with his mother) N: ‘ats dat? (“What’s that?) M: That’s butter. N: (repeating) taba (butter) ‘ats dat? (“What’s that?”) M: Some ducks and a doggie. N: Sa kuks (“some ducks”) No goggie (but there isn’t a doggie)

  7. 1. Observations Basic findings: Growth of Mean Length of Utterance (MLU): number of morphemes used in a single utterance Baby socks Talked today Walks dogs

  8. 1. Observations • Brown’s (1973) Stages Mean Length of Utterance is a good index of child’s language maturity. Stages indicate growth of language complexity. Stage 1 - 12 to 26 months of age = MLU 1.00 to 2.00 Stage 2 - 27 to 30 months of age = MLU 2.00 to 2.50 Stage 3 - 31 to 34 months of age = MLU 2.50 to 3.00 Stage 4 - 35 to 40 months of age = MLU 3.00 to 3.75 Stage 5 - 41 to 46 months of age = MLU 3.75 to 4.50

  9. 1. Observations Corpora for children’s language acquisition Child Language Data Exchange System (CHILDES) • http://childes.psy.cmu.edu/data/ • http://www.let.uu.nl/~Jacqueline.vanKampen/personal/CHILDES-English/childes-corpus.htm

  10. 1. Observations Pros? Cons?

  11. 2. Wug Studies http://www.maccs.mq.edu.au/~gtesan/AcquisitionMq/videos/Berkosexp.mov

  12. 2. Wug Studies

  13. 2. Wug Studies

  14. 2. Wug Studies

  15. 2. Wug Studies Rules governing the use of irregulars follow a developmental U-shaped curve • went men worst • goed mans baddest • wented mens worstest • went men worst

  16. 2. Wug Studies Developmental U-shaped curve • Developmental U-shaped curve Proportion correct Time

  17. 2. Wug Studies 14 months: What that? Who that? 15 months: all-gone milk? no-no dada, woof-woof doggy, go store, daddy go? 21 months: Be quiet Shag. Baby cry. Baby crying. 24 months: Why not here? Don’t no play outside. 25 months: Where daddy go? I no go outside. I don’t can go outside. 4 years: God won’t let you die, Mom, until your child knows how to cook, will he? 5 years: Child: Was Daddy a Navy man? Mother: Yes. Child: Are they smart? Mother: Yes Child: Was Daddy smart? Mother: Yes Child: Why isn’t he anymore?

  18. 2. Wug Studies Pros? Cons?

  19. 3. ERPs Attach hat to babies head Hat has electrodes that measure Electrical movement across the skull Electrical movement tells us • What part of the brain is activated • When the brain reacts to the stimulus and how much it reacts

  20. 3. ERPs Basic findings . . .

  21. 3. ERPs Pros? Cons?

  22. Stages of First Language Acquisition • Telegraphic Stage — 2-5 years • learning 20-30 words per day • more complex syntax • Fine-tuning — 5-10 yrs. • refining grammar • building vocabulary

  23. 4. Experimental Trickery • http://www.maccs.mq.edu.au/~gtesan/AcquisitionMq/videos/MedialWHquestions.mov

  24. 4. Experimental Trickery How would you test . . . • 3-5 year olds’ comprehension of the passive • 24 month olds’ basic word learning (teaching words they’ve never encountered before) • The influence of motherese on learning questions • 3 year olds’ production of embedded clauses (before you touch your nose touch your head) • 3 years olds’ understanding of pronoun use in stories • Children’s progressive comprehension (over time) of the phrase “she’s easy to see” • 4 year old children’s ability to understand jokes or sarcasm • 3 year olds’ comprehension of embedded clauses (before you touch your nose touch your head)

  25. 4. Experimental Trickery Pros? Cons?

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