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Language acquisition



 
 
Language acquisition is the study of the processes through which learners acquire language. By itself, language acquisition refers to first language acquisition, which studies infants' acquisition of their native language, whereas second language acquisition
Second language acquisition

Second language acquisition is the process by which people learn a second language in addition to their first language. The term second language is used to describe the acquisition of any language after the acquisition of the mother tongue....
 deals with acquisition of additional languages in both children and adults.

One hotly debated issue is whether the biological contribution includes capacities specific to language acquisition, often referred to as universal grammar
Universal grammar

Universal grammar is a theory of linguistics postulating principles of grammar shared by all languages, thought to be innate to humans . It attempts to explain language acquisition in general, not describe specific languages....
.






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Language acquisition is the study of the processes through which learners acquire language. By itself, language acquisition refers to first language acquisition, which studies infants' acquisition of their native language, whereas second language acquisition
Second language acquisition

Second language acquisition is the process by which people learn a second language in addition to their first language. The term second language is used to describe the acquisition of any language after the acquisition of the mother tongue....
 deals with acquisition of additional languages in both children and adults.

One hotly debated issue is whether the biological contribution includes capacities specific to language acquisition, often referred to as universal grammar
Universal grammar

Universal grammar is a theory of linguistics postulating principles of grammar shared by all languages, thought to be innate to humans . It attempts to explain language acquisition in general, not describe specific languages....
. For fifty years, linguists Noam Chomsky
Noam Chomsky

Avram Noam Chomsky is an United States linguistics, philosopher, cognitive science, political activist, author, and lecturer. He is an Institute Professor emeritus and professor emeritus of linguistics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology....
 and the late Eric Lenneberg
Eric Lenneberg

Eric Heinz Lenneberg was a linguistics and neurologist who pioneered ideas on language acquisition and cognitive psychology, particularly in terms of the concept of innateness....
 have argued for the hypothesis that children have innate, language-specific abilities that facilitate and constrain language learning.

Other researchers, including Elizabeth Bates
Elizabeth Bates

Elizabeth Bates was a Professor of psychology and cognitive science at the UCSD. She was an internationally-renowned expert and leading researcher in child language acquisition, psycholinguistics, and the neurolinguistics, and she authored 10 books and over 200 peer-reviewed articles and book chapters on these subjects....
, Catherine Snow
Catherine E. Snow

Catherine Elizabeth Snow is an educational psychology who has contributed significantly to theories of bilingualism and language acquisition through parent-child interaction....
, Brian MacWhinney
Brian MacWhinney

Brian James MacWhinney is a Professor of Psychology and Modern Languages at Carnegie Mellon University. He is an internationally-renowned expert and leading researcher in Language acquisition and second language acquisition, psycholinguistics, and the neurolinguistics, and he has written and edited several books and over 100 peer-reviewed ar...
, and Michael Tomasello
Michael Tomasello

Michael Tomasello is a developmentalpsychologist and a co-director of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig .Tomasello has worked to identify the unique cognitive and cultural processes that distinguish humans from their nearest primate relatives, the great apes....
, have hypothesized that language learning results from general cognitive abilities and the interaction between learners and their surrounding communities. Recent work by William O'Grady proposes that complex syntactic phenomena result from an efficiency-driven, linear computational system. O'Grady describes his work as "nativism without Universal Grammar."

One of the most important advances in the study of language acquisition was the creation of the CHILDES
Childes

Childes may refer to:*Childe's Tomb , Dartmoor, England*CHILDES, or Child Language Data Exchange System, a database of child language...
 database by Brian MacWhinney
Brian MacWhinney

Brian James MacWhinney is a Professor of Psychology and Modern Languages at Carnegie Mellon University. He is an internationally-renowned expert and leading researcher in Language acquisition and second language acquisition, psycholinguistics, and the neurolinguistics, and he has written and edited several books and over 100 peer-reviewed ar...
 and Catherine Snow
Catherine E. Snow

Catherine Elizabeth Snow is an educational psychology who has contributed significantly to theories of bilingualism and language acquisition through parent-child interaction....
.

Nativist theories


Nativist
Psychological nativism

In the field of psychology, nativism is the view that certain skills or abilities are 'native' or hard wired into the brain at Childbirth. This is in contrast to Empiricism, the 'blank slate' or tabula rasa view which states that the brain has inborn capabilities for learning from the environment but does not contain content such as innate be...
 theories hold that children are born with an innate propensity for language acquisition, and that this ability makes the task of learning a first language easier than it would otherwise be. These "hidden assumptions" allow children to quickly figure out what is and isn't possible in the grammar of their native language, and allow them to master that grammar by the age of three. Nativists view language as a fundamental part of the human genome, as the trait that makes humans human, and its acquisition as a natural part of maturation. They believe that children learning language are as natural and normal as dolphins learning to swim or songbirds learning to sing.

Language acquisition device and Universal Grammar


Noam Chomsky
Noam Chomsky

Avram Noam Chomsky is an United States linguistics, philosopher, cognitive science, political activist, author, and lecturer. He is an Institute Professor emeritus and professor emeritus of linguistics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology....
 originally theorized that children were born with a hard-wired language acquisition device
Language acquisition device

The Language Acquisition Device is a postulated "organ" of the human brain that is supposed to function as a congenital device for learning symbolic language ....
 (LAD) in their brains. He later expanded this idea into that of Universal Grammar
Universal grammar

Universal grammar is a theory of linguistics postulating principles of grammar shared by all languages, thought to be innate to humans . It attempts to explain language acquisition in general, not describe specific languages....
; a set of innate principles and adjustable parameters that are common to all human languages. According to Chomsky, the presence of Universal Grammar in the brains of children allow them to deduce the structure of their native languages from "mere exposure".

Much of the nativist position is based on the early age at which children show competency in their native grammars, as well as the ways in which they do (and do not) make errors. Some research suggests that infants are born able to distinguish between phonemes in minimal pairs
Minimal pair

In phonology, minimal pairs are pairs of words or phrases in a particular language, which differ in only one phonological element, such as a Phone , phoneme, toneme or chroneme and have a distinct meaning....
, distinguishing between bah and pah, for example. Another source of support for this viewpoint is that young children (under the age of three) do not speak in fully formed sentences, instead saying things like 'want cookie' or 'my coat.' However, they do not say things like 'want my' or 'I cookie,' statements that would break the syntactic structure of the phrase
Phrase

In grammar, a phrase is a group of words that functions as a single unit in the syntax of a Sentence .For example the house at the end of the street is a phrase....
, a component of universal grammar. Children also seem remarkably immune from error correction by adults which nativists say would not be the case if children were learning from their parents.

Critical period hypothesis


The possible existence of a critical period
Critical period

This article is about a critical period in an organism's development. See also America's Critical Period.In general, a critical period is a limited time in which an event can occur, usually to result in some kind of transformation....
 for language acquisition is another nativist argument. Critical periods are time frames during which environmental exposure is needed to stimulate an innate trait. Young chaffinches
Chaffinch

The Chaffinch, Fringilla coelebs, is a small passerine bird in the finch family Fringillidae, also called a spink. Its large double white wing bars, white tail edges and greenish rump easily identify this 14-16 cm long species....
, for example, must hear the song of an adult chaffinch before reaching maturity, or else would never be able to sing. Nativists argue that if a critical period for language acquisition exists (see below), then language acquisition must be spurred on by the unfolding of the genome during maturation. Much research on the critical age period or window of opportunity (Robertson) http://www.asian-efl-journal.com/marcharticles_pr.php see the Asian EFL Journal http://www.asian-efl-journal.com

Linguist Eric Lenneberg
Eric Lenneberg

Eric Heinz Lenneberg was a linguistics and neurologist who pioneered ideas on language acquisition and cognitive psychology, particularly in terms of the concept of innateness....
 stated, in a 1964 paper, that a critical period of language acquisition ends around the age of 12 years. He claimed that if no language is learned before then (see Feral children), it could never be learned in a normal and fully functional sense. This was called the "Critical period hypothesis
Critical Period Hypothesis

The Critical Period Hypothesis refers to a long-standing debate in linguistics and language acquisition over the extent to which the ability to acquire language is biologically linked to age....
." However, the opponents of the critical period hypothesis say that in this example the child is hardly growing up in a nurturing environment, and that the lack of language acquisition in later life may be due to the results of a generally abusive environment rather than being specifically due to a lack of exposure to language.

The critical period hypothesis of brain plasticity and learning capacity has been called into question. Other factors may account for differences in adult and child language learning. Children’s apparently effortless and rapid language acquisition may be explained by the fact that the environment is set up to engage them in frequent and optimal learning opportunities. By contrast, adults seem to have an initial advantage in their learning of vocabulary and syntax, but may never achieve native-like pronunciation. A more up-to-date view of the Critical Period Hypothesis is represented by the University of Maryland, College Park
University of Maryland, College Park

The University of Maryland, College Park is a public research university located in the city of College Park, Maryland in Prince George's County, Maryland outside Washington, D.C....
 instructor Robert DeKeyser. DeKeyser argues that although it is true that there is a critical period, this does not mean that adults cannot learn a second language perfectly, at least on the syntactic level. DeKeyser talks about the role of language aptitude as opposed to the critical period.

Creolization


More support for the innateness of language comes from the deaf population
Population

File:Population density.pngIn biology, a population is the collection of inter-breeding organisms of a particular species; in sociology, a collection of human beings....
 of Nicaragua
Nicaragua

Nicaragua officially the Republic of Nicaragua , is a representative democracy republic. It is the largest state in Central America with an area of 130,000 km2, about the size of the state of New York....
. Until approximately 1986, Nicaragua had neither education nor a formalized sign language for the deaf. As Nicaraguans attempted to rectify the situation, they discovered that children past a certain age had difficulty learning any language. Additionally, the adults observed that the younger children were using gestures unknown to them to communicate with each other. They invited Judy Kegl
Judy Kegl

Judy Shepard-Kegl received her Ph.D. in linguistics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1985, has worked and written extensively within her field and is best known for her work and multiple academic publishings on the Nicaraguan Sign Language , a signed language spontaneously developed by deaf children in a number of schools in...
, an American linguist from MIT
Massachusetts Institute of Technology

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology is a private university research university located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, United States....
, to help unravel this mystery. Kegl discovered that these children had developed their own, distinct, Nicaraguan Sign Language
Nicaraguan Sign Language

Nicaraguan Sign Language is a sign language spontaneously developed by deaf children in a number of schools in western Nicaragua in the 1970s and 1980s....
 with its own rules of "sign-phonology
Phonology

Phonology is the systematic use of sound to encode meaning in any spoken human language, or the field of linguistics studying this use. Just as a language has syntax and vocabulary, it also has a phonology in the sense of a sound system....
" and syntax
Syntax

In linguistics, syntax is the study of the principles and rules for constructing Sentence s in natural languages. In addition to referring to the discipline, the term syntax is also used to refer directly to the rules and principles that govern the sentence structure of any individual language, as in "the Irish syntax"....
. She also discovered some 300 adults who, despite being raised in otherwise healthy environments, had never acquired language, and turned out to be incapable of learning language in any meaningful sense. While it was possible to teach vocabulary, these individuals were unable to learn syntax.

Derek Bickerton
Derek Bickerton

Derek Bickerton is a linguistics and Professor Emeritus at the University of Hawaii, Manoa. Based on his work in creole languages in Guyana and Hawaii, he has proposed that the features of creole languages provide powerful insights into the Origins of language of language both by individuals and as a feature of the human species....
's (1981) landmark work with Hawaiian pidgin speakers studied immigrant populations where first-generation parents spoke highly-ungrammatical "pidgin
Pidgin

A pidgin is a simplified language that develops as a means of communication between two or more groups that do not have a language in common, in situations such as trade....
 English". Their children, Bickerton found, grew up speaking a grammatically rich language -- neither English nor the syntax-less pidgin of their parents. Furthermore, the language exhibited many of the underlying grammatical features of many other natural languages. The language became "creolized
Creole language

A creole language, or simply a creole, is a stable language that originates seemingly as a nativization pidgin. This understanding of creole genesis culminated in Robert A....
", and is known as Hawaii Creole English. This was taken as powerful evidence for children's innate grammar module.

Evolution of language


Debate within the nativist position now revolves around how language evolved. Derek Bickerton
Derek Bickerton

Derek Bickerton is a linguistics and Professor Emeritus at the University of Hawaii, Manoa. Based on his work in creole languages in Guyana and Hawaii, he has proposed that the features of creole languages provide powerful insights into the Origins of language of language both by individuals and as a feature of the human species....
 suggests a single mutation, a "big bang", linked together previously evolved traits into full language. Others like Steven Pinker
Steven Pinker

Steven Arthur Pinker is a prominent Canadian-American experimental psychology, cognitive science, and author of popular science. Pinker is known for his wide-ranging advocacy of evolutionary psychology and the computational theory of mind....
 argue for a slower evolution over longer periods of time.

Empiricist theories

Empiricist
Empiricism

In philosophy, empiricism is a theory of knowledge which asserts that knowledge arises from experience. Empiricism is one of several competing views about how we know "things," part of the branch of philosophy called epistemology, or "theory of knowledge"....
 theories of language acquisition include statistical learning theories of language acquisition, Relational Frame Theory
Relational frame theory

Relational frame theory, or RFT, is a psychology theory of human language and cognition, developed largely through the efforts of Steven C....
, functionalist linguistics, usage-based language acquisition, social interaction
Social interaction

Social interaction is a dynamic, changing sequence of social actions between individuals who modify their actions and reactions according to those of their interaction partner....
ism and others.

Statistical learning theories of language acquisition

Some language acquisition researchers, such as Elissa Newport
Elissa L. Newport

Elissa L. Newport is George Eastman Professor of Brain & Cognitive Sciences and Linguistics at the University of Rochester. She specializes in language acquisition and developmental linguistics, focusing on the relationship between language development and syntax....
, Richard Aslin, and Jenny Saffran
Jenny Saffran

Jenny Saffran is a Professor of Psychology at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. She specializes in language acquisition and early cognitive development, and she also conducts research on music cognition....
, believe that language acquisition is based primarily on general learning
Learning

Learning is acquiring new knowledge, behaviors, skills, Value s, preferences or understanding, and may involve synthesizing different types of information....
 mechanisms, namely statistical learning. The development of connectionist models that are able to successfully learn words and syntactical conventions supports the predictions of statistical learning theories of language acquisition, as do empirical studies of children's learning of words and syntax.

Social interactionism

Social-interactionists, such as Catherine Snow
Catherine E. Snow

Catherine Elizabeth Snow is an educational psychology who has contributed significantly to theories of bilingualism and language acquisition through parent-child interaction....
, theorize that adults play an important part in children's language acquisition (see Moerk, E. L., 1992; also: http://www.jstor.org/pss/1128444). However, some researchers claim that the empirical data on which theories of social interactionism are based have often been over-representative of middle class American and European parent-child interactions. Various anthropological studies of other human cultures, as well as anecdotal evidence from western families, suggests rather that many, if not the majority, of the world's children are not spoken to in a manner akin to traditional language lessons, but nevertheless grow up to be fully fluent language users. Many researchers now take this into account in their analyses.

Nevertheless, Snow's criticisms might be powerful against Chomsky's argument, if the argument from the poverty of stimulus were indeed an argument about degenerate stimulus, but it is not. The argument from the poverty of stimulus is that there are principles of grammar that cannot be learned on the basis of positive input alone, however complete and grammatical that evidence is. This argument is not vulnerable to objection based on evidence from interaction studies such as Snow's, but it is vulnerable to the clear evidence of the availability of negative input given by conversation analysis
Conversation analysis

Conversation analysis is the study of talk in interaction. CA generally attempts to describe the orderliness, structure and sequential patterns of interaction, whether this is institutional or casual conversation....
. In addition, meta-analysis has shown that there is a large amount of corrections made to language produced by children. Moerk (1994) conducted a meta-analysis of 40 studies and found substantial evidence that corrections do indeed play a role. From this work, corrections are not only abundant but contingent on the mistakes of the child. (see behavior analysis of child development
Behavior analysis of child development

Child development in behavior analytic theory has origins in John B. Watson?s behaviorism. Watson wrote extensively on child development and conducted research ....
).

Relational Frame Theory

Relational Frame Theory
Relational frame theory

Relational frame theory, or RFT, is a psychology theory of human language and cognition, developed largely through the efforts of Steven C....
 (Hayes, Barnes-Holmes, Roche, 2001), provides a wholly selectionist/learning account of the origin and development of language competence and complexity. Based upon the principles of Skinnerian behaviorism
Behaviorism

Behaviorism or Behaviourism,also called the learning perspective is a philosophy of psychology based on the proposition that all things which organisms do ? including acting, thinking and feeling?can and should be regarded as behaviors....
, RFT posits that children acquire language purely through interacting with the environment. RFT theorists introduced the concept of functional contextualism
Functional contextualism

Functional contextualism is a modern philosophy of science rooted in philosophical pragmatism and contextualism. It is most actively developed in behavioral science in general and the field of behavior analysis in particular....
 in language learning, which emphasizes the importance of predicting and influencing psychological events, such as thoughts, feelings, and behaviors, by focusing on manipulable variables in their context. RFT distinguishes itself from Skinner's work by identifying and defining a particular type of operant conditioning
Operant conditioning

Operant conditioning is the use of consequences to modify the occurrence and form of behavior. Operant conditioning is distinguished from classical conditioning in that operant conditioning deals with the Behavior modification or operant behavior....
 known as derived relational responding, a learning process that to date appears to occur only in humans possessing a capacity for language. Empirical studies supporting the predictions of RFT suggest that children learn language via a system of inherent reinforcements, challenging the view that language acquisition is based upon innate, language-specific cognitive capacities.

Emergentist theories

Emergentist
Emergentism

In philosophy, emergentism is the belief in emergence, particularly as it involves consciousness and the philosophy of mind, and as it contrasts with reductionism....
 theories, such as MacWhinney's
Brian MacWhinney

Brian James MacWhinney is a Professor of Psychology and Modern Languages at Carnegie Mellon University. He is an internationally-renowned expert and leading researcher in Language acquisition and second language acquisition, psycholinguistics, and the neurolinguistics, and he has written and edited several books and over 100 peer-reviewed ar...
 Competition Model, posit that language acquisition is a cognitive process that emerges from the interaction of biological pressures and the environment. According to these theories, neither nature
Nature

File:Jungle in Punjab.JPGNature, in the broadest sense, is equivalent to the natural world, physical universe, material world or material universe....
 nor nurture alone is sufficient to trigger language learning; both of these influences must work together in order to allow children to acquire a language. The proponents of these theories argue that general cognitive processes subserve language acquisition and that the end result of these processes is language-specific phenomena, such as word learning
Vocabulary development

Vocabulary development is the process whereby speakers of language enhance their working vocabulary with new words.The average persons' vocabulary consists of 10,000 words, regardless of native tongue....
 and grammar acquisition
Syntax

In linguistics, syntax is the study of the principles and rules for constructing Sentence s in natural languages. In addition to referring to the discipline, the term syntax is also used to refer directly to the rules and principles that govern the sentence structure of any individual language, as in "the Irish syntax"....
. The findings of many empirical studies support the predictions of these theories, suggesting that language acquisition is a more complex process than many believe.

Criticism of nativist theories


Many criticisms of the basic assumptions of generative theory have been put forth, with little response from its champions. The concept of a Language Acquisition Device (LAD) is unsupported by evolutionary anthropology, which shows a gradual adaptation of the human body to the use of language, rather than a sudden appearance of a complete set of binary parameters (which are common to digital computers but not to neurological systems such as a human brain) delineating the whole spectrum of possible grammars ever to have existed and ever to exist.

The theory has several hypothetical constructs, such as movement, empty categories, complex underlying structures, and strict binary branching, that cannot possibly be acquired from any amount of input. Since the theory is, in essence, unlearnably complex, then it must be innate. A different theory of language, however, may yield different conclusions. Examples of alternative theories that do not utilize movement and empty categories are head-driven phrase structure grammar
Head-driven phrase structure grammar

Head-driven phrase structure grammar is a highly lexicalized, non-derivational generative grammar theory developed by Carl Pollard and Ivan Sag ....
, lexical functional grammar
Lexical functional grammar

Lexical functional grammar is a grammar framework in theoretical linguistics, a variety of generative grammar. The development of the theory was initiated by Joan Bresnan and Ronald Kaplan in the 1970s, in reaction to the direction research in the area of transformational grammar had begun to take....
, and several varieties of construction grammar
Construction grammar

The term construction grammar covers a "family" of theories, or models, of grammar that are based on the idea that the primary unit of grammar is the grammatical construction rather than the atomic syntax unit and the rule that combines atomic units, and that the grammar of a language is made up of taxonomy of families of constructions....
. While all theories of language acquisition posit some degree of innateness, a less convoluted theory might involve less innate structure and more learning. Under such a theory of grammar, the input, combined with both general and language-specific learning capacities, might be sufficient for acquisition.

See also

  • Language development
    Language development

    Language development is a process starting early in human life, when a person begins to acquire language by learning it as it is spoken and by mimicry....
  • Language education
    Language education

    Language education includes the teaching and learning of a language. It can include improving a learner's native language; however, it is more commonly used with regard to second language acquisition, that is, the learning of a foreign language or second language, and that is the meaning that is treated in this article....
  • Language school
    Language school

    A language school is a school where one studies a foreign language. Classes at a language school are usually geared towards, but not limited to, communicative competence in a foreign language....
  • Language exchange
    Language exchange

    Tandem language learning is a method of language learning based on mutual language exchange between tandem partners . Many language schools in the world, organised as TANDEM International, as well as many universities, are working with this method....
  • List of language acquisition researchers
    List of language acquisition researchers

    Below are some notable researchers in language acquisition listed by intellectual orientation and research topic.Nativists* Noam Chomsky* Eric Lenneberg...