Chapter 1: Origins and History of Psycholinguistics: I. Aims
Chapter 1: Origins and History of Psycholinguistics: I. Aims
I. Aims
II. Development
1950s – Psycholinguistics was born rooted within the behaviorist tradition; the
idea that frequent associations between stimuli and responses (association
based learned theory) would explain the structure of language as well as the
processes of language acquisition, language production, and language
comprehension. Language was researched and viewed as “verbal behavior.”
Still in this decade the theory of Chomsky about the nature of linguistic
knowledge strongly impacted the research in the field (mentalist approach to
cognition). Chomsky argued that behaviorist learning theories did not provide
adequate explanations of language acquisition by the child. The linguistic input to
which the child was exposed was too impoverished; thus, the child must begin
the acquisition process with some innate linguistic knowledge that constrains a
set of candidate grammars. These claims provided the basis for the development
of research on the field of developmental psycholinguistics. This research
emphasized the distinction between surface structure and deep structure.
This new trend is referred in the bibliography as “modern psycholinguistics.” At
the same time cognitive psychologists such as Miller and Broadbent and
computer scientists such as Newell and Simon developed an information
processing approach to cognition.
III. Summary
IV. References
Tanenhaus, Michael K. “Psycholinguistics: an overview” in Newmeyer, F.
Linguistics: The Cambridge Survey. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1988, 1-37.
a) What were the ideas presented by Chomsky that had a big impact
on the views of language and shaped this science?