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Studying

This lecture provides an introduction to psycholinguistics. It defines psycholinguistics as the interdisciplinary study of the psychological and neurological factors that enable human language acquisition, use, and understanding. The lecture objectives are to define psycholinguistics, describe its sub-disciplines and scope, and discuss its main areas of study. The key sub-disciplines include theoretical, developmental, social, educational, and neuro-psycholinguistics. The scope of psycholinguistics involves how language is acquired, produced, and processed in the brain. Its areas of study focus on linguistic components like phonetics and linguistic and psychology-related areas such as word recognition and language development.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
137 views2 pages

Studying

This lecture provides an introduction to psycholinguistics. It defines psycholinguistics as the interdisciplinary study of the psychological and neurological factors that enable human language acquisition, use, and understanding. The lecture objectives are to define psycholinguistics, describe its sub-disciplines and scope, and discuss its main areas of study. The key sub-disciplines include theoretical, developmental, social, educational, and neuro-psycholinguistics. The scope of psycholinguistics involves how language is acquired, produced, and processed in the brain. Its areas of study focus on linguistic components like phonetics and linguistic and psychology-related areas such as word recognition and language development.

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Lecture 1

Lecturer: Dr. Saliha Chelli

Level: Master (first semester)

Lecture Objectives: Introduction to Psycholinguistics


 Definitions, sub-disciplines, scope, areas of study and history

1. Definition of psycholinguistics

Scholars started been interested in the field of psycholinguistics, mainly after the Transformational
Generative Grammar movement had made the link between language and human psychology. Psycholinguistics is
a branch of cognitive psychology that studies the psychological basis of linguistics competence and performance.
According to Williams (2001), it is a discipline in which the insights of linguistics and psychology are brought to
bear on the cognitive aspects of language understanding and production. In other words, it is the study of
psychological and neurolobiological factors that enable humans to acquire, use and understand language
(psycholinguistics, 2006). Thus, studies done in psycholinguistics help us to understand the psychology of how we
learn and understand language. Simply put, psycholinguistics is interdisciplinary and is studied in a variety of fields
including psychology, cognitive science and linguistics.

2. Sub-disciplines within psycholinguistics

Psycholiguistics includes a number of disciplines as mentioned above:

 Theoretical psycholinguistics: language theories related to human mental processes in using


language (phonology, diction, syntax, discourse and intonation)

 Developmental psycholinguistics: the process of language acquisition (L1 and L2)

 Social psycholinguistis: the social aspects of language being a string of thought and insights.

 Educational psycholinguistics: the educational aspects in formal education: the role of language
in the teaching of reading and language proficiency.

 Neuro- linguistics: relation between language and the brain: what happens to language input and
how output is programmed and formed inside the brain/ The function of the hemispheres in the
processing of language.

It also studies the effect of brain damage in these centres referred to as language pathology
concerned with people who have a breakdown of language, such as old people who had a burst
blood vessel in the brain, affecting Broca or Wernicke areas) or young people who have an
impairment of the brain due to an accident.

 Experimental psycholinguistics: the act and effect of using language.

 Applied psycholinguistics: the application of all above subfields into other subjects.

3. Scope of psycholinguistics

Psychololinguistics as stated previously is part of the emerging field of study called cognitive science, which
is an interdisciplinary venture that draws upon the insights of psychologists, linguists, computer scientists,
neuroscientists and philosophers to study the mind and mental processes (Johnson- Laird, 1988a; Stilling et al.,
1995). Therefore, its scope is broad and it is concerned with studies on:
 How language is acquired and produced

 How the brain works on language

 Language acquisition

 The difference between children language acquisition and learning

 Linguistic interference

 Language development

 The role of motivation in foreign language learning

4. Areas of study

Psycholinguistics main concern is language and how it is processed in the brain. It is why its areas of study
include several subdivisions that are based on the components that make up human language: linguistic-
related areas and psychology-related areas:

a. Linguistics areas:

- Phonetics and phonology: Phonetics is concerned with how sounds are produced,

Transmitted and perceived while phonology is concerned with how sounds function

in relation to each other in language.

- Morphology is a sub-division of grammar concerned with the study of the internal

structure of words.

- Syntax is the study of the way in which sentences are constructed from smaller units

called constituents.

- Semantics is part of grammar concerned with the study of linguistic meaning.

- Pragmatics is concerned with the study of meaning as communicated by a speaker.

This type of study necessarily involves the interpretation of what people mean in a particular context.

b. Psychology related areas

- The study of word recognition: the ability to recognize written words correctly. It is considered as the
most frequent cognitive activity involved in reading. According to Wolf and Katzi-Cohen (2001), word recognition
is a summation of accuracy and speed of meaning access through decoding printed material.

- Developmental psycholinguistics studies how language is acquired by children.

References

Williams, John, N. (2001). Psycholinguistics). Cambridge: Cambrige University Press.

Wolf, M., & Katzi-Cohen, T. (2001). Reading fluency and its intervention. Scientific Studies of Reading, 5(3), 211-
238.

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