Lecture 21: Acquisition I

The Big Question about Human Language!

Facts that we need to explain...

Part of an answer...

Human Nature: something about how we're built makes us learn languages the way we do.

Of course, this answer just begs the question of what it is about human nature that gives us this special ability. Providing a detailed answer to this question is one of the basic goals of linguistics. The kinds of linguistic analysis that we've been engaged in over the course of the semester is also aimed at that goal.

Lessons from Birdsong

Different Effects of Nature and Environment in different species of song-birds.

Cuckoo: learns cuckoo song no matter what the environment
 
Bullfinch: learns more or less any song from the environment
 
Song Sparrow: some aspects of song develop the same no matter what; other aspects of song dependent on the environment
click here to hear a sample song-sparrow song. [The recording is from Greg Kunkel's Birdsong Website ... worth a visit for the ornithologically inclined; did you ever wonder how a Baltimore Oriole sounds, or a Mourning Warbler, or a Indigo Bunting?]

...numerous parallels between sparrow song and human language

Features of Song Sparrow Song

Lessons from Apes

Attempts to teach complex language-like systems to primates have generally been a failure. Many of the attempts to teach spoken or signed languages to primates are summarized in Fromkin & Rodman's textbook rather nicely.

Laura Pettito & Nim Chimpsky
 
Articles: New York Times, The Fund for Animals, unknown (but useful), Laura Pettito, BBC Documentary

To cut a somewhat lengthy story very short: although primates are extremely intelligent and able to perform many cognitively sophisticated tasks rather well, their ability to combine symbols to form utterances has generally been very disappointing. They have been able to learn signs as names for things or actions, but unable to go much beyond that.

...although primates have far superior 'general intelligence' to song birds

Parallels between human language and bird-song

Language Universals

I. All languages have coronal consonants (e.g. alveolar, palatal, dental)

II. In all languages it is impossible to move a "wh-phrase" out of a conjoined noun phrase, as in (2b) and (4).

1a. You met who?
b. Who did you meet?
 
2a. You met Mary and who?
b. *Who did you meet Mary and?

French

3. Qui as-tu encontré?
who have-you met
 
4. *Qui as-tu encontré Marie et?
who have-you met Marie and

Non-Universal Features of Language

Many languages allow wh-phrases to 'strand' prepositions.

5. You met Mary with who?
 
6. Who did you meet Mary with?

Many other languages do not allow 'preposition stranding'

French

7. Tu as encontré Marie avec qui?
you have met Marie with who
 
8. *Qui as-tu encontré Marie avec?
who have-you met Marie with

 

Linguistic Abilities Requiring No Input

1. Innate ability to discriminate speech sounds

e.g. Japanese babies discriminate r/l

 

2. "Home Sign" languages of deaf children born to hearing parents

languages with basic word order pattern
similar complexity to Genie's language

 

3. Non-imitation of parents

Dialog 1:
 
Child: My teacher holded the baby rabbits and we patted them
Adult: Did you say your teacher held the baby rabbits?
Child: Yes
Adult: What did you say she did?
Child: She holded the baby rabbits and we patted them.
Adult: Did you say she held them tightly?
Child: No, she holded them loosely.
 
Dialog 2:
 
Child: Want other one spoon, Daddy.
Father: You mean, you want "the other spoon"
Child: Yes, I want other one spoon, please, Daddy.
Father: Can you say "the other spoon"?
Child: Other ... one ... spoon.
Father: Say ... "other"
Child: Other.
Father: Spoon.
Child: Spoon.
Father: Other ... spoon.
Child: Other ... spoon. Now give me other one spoon?

 

4. Creole languages; regularization and extension of input

5. Syntactic Sophistication

Knowledge of wanna-contraction possibilities in English

9a. I want to eat a cookie.
b. I wanna eat a cookie.
 
10a You want to eat what?
b. You wanna eat what?
 
11a What do you want to eat?
b. What do you wanna eat?
 
12a You want who to eat a cookie?
b. Who do you want to eat a cookie?
 
13. *Who do you wanna eat a cookie.
 
14a Who do you want to help?
b. Who do you wanna help?

Generalization: wanna-contraction is not possible when questioning the subject of the subordinate clause.

Experiment (brief video shown in class on 12/2)

An Experiment to test wanna-contraction in children aged 3-5 years. This experimental procedure was developed by Prof. Stephen Crain (Univ. of Maryland) and his colleagues, and has been used to test many different aspects of young children's linguistic knowledge.

The first sample experimental protocol is designed to elicit questions in which the object of the subordinate clause is questioned (i.e. what is the action performed upon).

Exp: The rat looks hungry. I bet he wants to eat something. Ask Ratty what he wants.
Child: What do you wanna eat?
Rat: Some cheese would be good.

The next protocol is used to elicit questions about the subject of the subordinate clause (i.e. who or what performs the action).

Exp: There are three guys in this story: Cookie Monster, a dog, and this baby. One of them gets to take a walk, one gets to take a nap, and one gets to eat a cookie. And the rat gets to choose who does each thing. So, one gets to take a walk, right? Ask Ratty who he wants.
Child: Who do you want to take a walk?
Rat: I want the dog to take a walk.