WELCOME TO OUR BLOG!! It was created by students from UNAH of the class Introduction to Linguistic. It was assigned by Lic. Patricia Garcia de Borjas. In this blog we are going to discuss The Language Processing and The Human Brain; We hope this will be useful for you.
jueves, 3 de mayo de 2018
Heydi Castillo
Hi, I'm Heydi! I am currently a student of the foreign language career, my classmates and I are having a class called introduction to linguistics class, we have created this blog as a support on the subject of the brain and the process of the human language; presenting it in a simple so,l hope you can enjoy it !
Yennifer Canaca
Hello everyone!!!
I am Yennifer Canaca. I am a student of Introduction to Linguistic class. This blog was create to help you to develop some different topics in this case we are going to explain the topic Language Processing and the Human Brain, I hope you improve your knowledge!
I am Yennifer Canaca. I am a student of Introduction to Linguistic class. This blog was create to help you to develop some different topics in this case we are going to explain the topic Language Processing and the Human Brain, I hope you improve your knowledge!
Jeimy Fonseca
Hi! I'm Jeimy Fonseca , I'm a student of introduction to linguistics class ,my classmates and I will be here if you need help in something , I hope you like it !
Ony Rodriguez
Hello! My name is Ony Rodriguez. I am student of the class of Introduction to Linguistic.
And today I am going to contribute to this blog about the brain and the process of the language. I hope you enjoy it.
And today I am going to contribute to this blog about the brain and the process of the language. I hope you enjoy it.
Stefany Tejada
Hi!!
I am Stefany Tejada I'm student of the class Intruduction to Linguistic.
This time I was given the opportunity to work on this discussing blog about the process of language in the brain. I hope you enjoy my contributions.
I am Stefany Tejada I'm student of the class Intruduction to Linguistic.
This time I was given the opportunity to work on this discussing blog about the process of language in the brain. I hope you enjoy my contributions.
Summary
Language Processing and the Human Brain
awareness of the processes involved.
The speech signal
Understanding a sentence involves analysis at many levels; to begin with, we must comprehend the individual speech sounds we hear. We are not conscious of the complicated processes we use to understand speech any more than we are conscious of the complicated processes of digesting food and utilizing nutrients.
We must study these processes deliberately and scientifically. To understand this process, some knowledge of the signal can be helpful.
Speech perception
Speech is a continuous signal. In natural speech, sounds overlap and influence each other, and yet listeners have the impression that they are hearing discrete units such as words, morphemes, syllables, and phonemes.
How does a listener know that two physically distinct instances of a sound are the same? This is called “the lack of invariance problem.” despite these problems; listeners are usually able to understand what they hear because our speech perception mechanisms are designed to overcome the variability and lack of discreteness in the speech signal.
Bottom - up and top – down models
Language comprehension is very fast and automatic. We understand an utterance as fast as we hear it or read it, ordinarily, we can process spoken language at a rate of around twenty phonemes per second.
Bottom – up processing moves step by step from the incoming acoustic or visual
signal, to phonemes, morphemes, words and phrases , and ultimately to semantic
interpretation.
In top – down processing the listener relies on higher level semantic, syntactic, and contextual information to analyze the acoustic signal.
Lexical access and word recognition
Psycholinguistics have conducted a great deal of research on lexical access or word recognition, the process by which listeners obtain information about the meaning and syntactic properties of a word from their mental lexicon; several experimental techniques have been used in studies of lexical access.
Speech production
The listener's job is to decode the intended meaning of a message from the speech
signal produced by a speaker.
Application and misapplication of rules
Spontaneous errors show that the rules of morphology and syntax are also applied or misapplied when we speak. It is difficult to see this process in normal error – free speech, but when someone says groupment instead of grouping, ambigual instead of ambiguous, or bloodent instead of bloody, it shows that regular rules are applied to combine morphemes and from possible but nonexistent words.
Planning units
We might suppose that speakers' thoughts are simply translated into words one after the other via a semantic mapping process. Grammatical morpheme would be added as demanded by the syntactic rules of the language.
The comprehension and production of language is an enormously complex process that depends on many aspects of our linguistic knowledge, as well as dedicated processing principles and other cognitive capacities such as memory.
Brain and language
The brain is the most complex organ of the body. The surface of the brain is the cortex, often called “gray matter”, consisting of billions of neurons. The cortex is the decisions – making organ of the body. It receives massages from all of the sensory organs, initiates all voluntary and involuntary actions, and it is the storehouse of our memories and the seat of our consciousness; it is the organ that most distinguishes human from other animals, somewhere in this gray matter resides the grammar that represents our knowledge of language.
The brain is composed of a right and a left cerebral hemisphere, joined by the corpus callosum.
The corpus callosum allows the two hemisphere of the brain to communicate with
each other, without this system of connections, the hemispheres would operate independently. In general, the left hemisphere controls the right side of the body, and the right hemisphere controls the left side.
The localization of language in the brain
An issue of central concern has been to determine which parts of the brain are
responsible for human linguistic abilities.
Aphasia
The study of the aphasia has been an important area of research in understanding
the relationship between the brain and language. Aphasia is the neurological term
for any language disorders that results from acquired brain damage caused by disease or trauma.
Language and the brain development
Numerous neurolinguistics studies have found that the way that the brain is organized for language and grammar in the adult is already reflected in the brains of newborns and young infants, even before they have entered the period during which language actively develops.
The critical period
Under ordinary circumstances a child is introduced to language virtually at the
moment of birth. Adults talk to him and to each other in his presence. Children do not require language instruction, but they do need exposure to language to develop normally. Children who do not receive linguistic input during their formative years do not achieve native like grammatical competence.
The critical age hypothesis asserts that language is biologically based and that the
ability to learn a native language develops within a fixed period from birth to middle
childhood.
Discussion Questions
1. What is Broca's area and where is located?
2. How does the brain work in the language process?
3. What are three stages of information processing?
4. Where is language in the brain?
5. What is language comprehension?
6. Who studies psycholinguistics?
7. How does the comprehension and production of language begin?
8. What is the hemisphere in charge of language?
9. What is the location of the language?
10. What is Aphasia?
2. How does the brain work in the language process?
3. What are three stages of information processing?
4. Where is language in the brain?
5. What is language comprehension?
6. Who studies psycholinguistics?
7. How does the comprehension and production of language begin?
8. What is the hemisphere in charge of language?
9. What is the location of the language?
10. What is Aphasia?
Reference
Fromkin, V., Rodman, R, & Hyams, N. (2010). An introduction to language. New York. Michael Rosemberg
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