Language and Cognition
Language and Cognition
4 approaches:
Psycholinguistics - study of language processes through experiments
Neurolinguistics - study of language processes in patients
Neuroscience of language - study of language processes in brain
Sim to psycholinguistics:
• Cognitive task (stimuli & responses - measures behaviour in terms of
speed (reaction times) and accuracy (correctness))
Theory (although!)
• healthy subjects (but also patients)
• Experimental in nature
EEG / ERP
- image of brain work (measuring of brain waves, only simple processes, bad
spacial resolution (image distorted), excellent temporal resolution)
+ Spacial resolution
-Temporal delay, indirect, invasive
fMRI - Magnetic resonance imaging (localisation of internal cognitive х
processes)
Why?
MEG - Magnetoencephalography
Why?
+:
Causal relations, more flexible (injured/not), diff regions of lesion, info what
region is active
-:
tDCS
Sends electricity to brain, few risks
Of 3 parts:
• Cerebrum (‘big brain’) -> cerebral cortex (l and r), limbic system (l and
r), basal ganglia (l and r)
• Cerebellum -> left and right (symmetrical)
• Brain stem
Cerebellum ’s have left and right hemisphere, structure identical -> small
asymmetries can occur (facial, limb etc)
*Airport
• Problem of ecological validity and task specificity -> lab is not a real
world!
• Correlation, not causation
• Overinterpretation of effects and reverse inference (involvement, not
necessity)
• Brain functioning more complex than language to describe it
• False positives due to many data points
• Replication problems
• Sometimes less activation, in cognitive processes (default mode
network)
• Testing of theories is rare, often explanatory
• Neuroenchantment
Functional specialisation -> functional integration (activation of other
regions)
Inhibit or excite neurons
Consist of units that are connected to each other, they can excite or inhibit
They form different layers: input/intermediate/output
No explicit rules are programmed
Back-propagation = association between input and output is learned through
comparison actual responses versus correct ones
Limitations:
Evaluation of approaches:
• Increasingly more research requires a combination of multiple
approaches.
• Each approach has unique contribution
• Each approach has pros and cons. The value of a specific theory
increases when multiple different approaches converge to the same
conclusion. (= convergent operations)
How to get out of replication crisis
• Meta-analyses: integrating different studies
• Pre-registration/Registered reports
Lecture 4 Listening (to be finished with audio lecture aw)
1.
Problem of segmentation
Overcome by:
TRACE model
3 tears : word units, phoneme units, feature units
Phonemic restoration effect: incomplete word -> brain fills this gap and
produces sounds that are not there based on the context
BUT 2 caveats:
- Less context-word interactions when speech is clear and not ambiguous
- Interaction context-word especially in predictable contexts
4 strengths of TRACE model:
1. Limited scope because concerns only word recognition and says nothing
about understanding
2. Lacks a level of conceptual meaning that can be triggered by top-down
processes
3. Too much emphasis on top-down processes, our brain does not correct
everything (e.g. mispronunciation and ambiguous sounds)
4. Consists of many theoretical assumptions (immune to criticism?)
5. Model is incomplete (e.g. Orthographic influences and effect of
cognitive load)
6. Studies show that phoneme level can be activated as early as 50ms after
stimulus-onset)
Characteristics of Cohort model:
Motor theory
• Listeners imitate speakers’ articulation movements > McGurk effect
• During listening activity in motor cortex
• Mirror neurons
Finding that support the Motor theory:
1. Neuroscientific evidence showing that brain regions involved in
listening and speaking overlap
2. ERP studies showing rapid activation of motor regions in listening
3. Neurolinguistics evidence showing that listening is impaired following
damage to speech regions
4. TMS evidence showing that listening is negatively affected upon
stimulation of speech regions
1. Motor regions help predict the meaning of what is going to be said but
not the word itself
2. We do not understand how motor regions work together to select
correct lexical items
3. Certain listening regions not involved in speaking
4. Motor regions especially important when spoken input is not clear
=> dissociation between listening on the one hand and speaking, reading and
writing on the other hand
1. Patients have diff. problems with speech perceptions, evidence for the
3 pathways
2. But, sometimes difficult to make symptoms fit model (deep dysphasia)
3. But, explains components but not how they work (we need theories or
that)
=> dissociation recognise familiar words and access their meaning (affected)
=> dissociation repeating words and non-words (affected)
=> dissociation repetition words and non-words on the one hand and
comprehension on the other (impaired)
Sublexical route still intact
Deep dysphasia
=> unable to repeat words and non-words, but repeat semantically similar
words (e.g. air instead of cloud)
=> underlying phonological problems
Lecture 5 – Reading
Sub-processes of reading
Sources of knowledge present to understand a written text:
Phonological processe
Evidence:
• Inner voice
• Homophones
• Phonological neighborhoood
Limitations:
Semantic priming
E-Z reader model – is a serial model. Only one word is processed before
moving to the next >< SWIFT is a parallel model. Parallel processing of
current, previous & next word.
Strengths:
1. Eye movements offer a good insight into the process of information
processing during reading
2. Model emphasizes importance of factors such as word frequency and
predictability
3. Evidence that lexical processing consists of two phases
4. Processing next word during fixation on previous word facilitates
processing
5. Strong connection between eye movements and brain
6. No effect of next word on previous word -> serial rather than parallel
Limitations:
1. Mainly focus on when and what regarding eye movements, but little
focus on cognitive functions.
2. Little attention to higher-order processes of reading comprehension,
such as inference, integration of information and use of knowledge
sources during text comprehension
3. Unclear how the familiarity check happens (bottom-up or top-down)
4. Still more parallel processing than thought? (see OB1 reader)
Surface dyslexia
• Problems with irregularly spelled words
• No problems with regularly spelled words or non-words
• Route 1
Phonological dyslexia
Deep dyslexia
• Problems with unfamiliar words and non-words
• Semantic reading errors with high-frequency words: e.g. ship instead
of boat
• Does not fit well within the dual-route model
Strengths of dual route cascaded model:
Limitations:
Fundamental aspects:
• Speaking use processes of listening skills
• Much more difficult that they first appear
• Consists of series of sub-skills
Speaking:
Some evidence for perceptual loop, but still mainly for conflict-based theory:
Characteristics:
• Spreading activation between and within levels: conceptual/semantic -
syntactic - morphological - phonological; and also within a sentence
• Categorical rules at all levels (e.g. sentence order)
• Lexicon (connectionist) with nodes for all levels
(concepts, words, morphemes, phonemes)
• Insertion rules: highest activated item is
chosen/selected
=> BUT due to spreading activation, several neurons (nodes) are active
together, and sometimes a wrong word is selected too early
4 limitations:
1. Little attention to meaning construction and intended effect speaking
skill (semantics and pragmatics)
2. Nothing about timing of speech processes
3. Applies mainly to speech errors and less to normal speech
4. Unclear how interactive speech processes are, and unclear which
contexts determine degree of interaction
Characteristics:
• Also diffusion of activation, but feedforward
• 3 levels: lexical concepts > lemmas (abstract representations already
syntactically and semantically but not yet phonologically completed) >
word forms (morphemes and phonemes)
• Lexical selection = competitive process
• Serial processing
• Speech errors are avoided by monitoring
4 limitations:
1. Focus on word level and little explanation of sentence level
2. More interaction between levels than thought (neuroscientific
evidence)
3. More interaction between levels than thought (speech errors)
4. Lemma level is controversial
Compromise:
• Limited interaction
• Too much interaction (spreading activation) > many speaking errors
• Too little interaction > no production of new sentences and creativity
• Minimal distraction and interference > WEAVER ++
Traditional distinctions made in the study of aphasia and symptoms of each of
these forms:
• Broca’s aphasia
=> slow, non-fluent speech
=> neologisms
Causes:
Lecture 7 - Writing
Predictor of writing skills in children – reading -> learn about structure and
style of good writing, enhances vocabulary and knowledge
Better writing:
3 components:
Central executive system (CES) => coordination of all cognitive activities in
the brain
Visuospatial sketchpad
Plays a role, esp. during planning and revision, but possibly also during writing
concrete words
Writing impairments based on the brain condition – dysgraphias
Diagnosed by neurolinguist by means of writing test
Word categories used: regularly spelled, irregularly spelled, non-existing
words
People with Alzheimer use both routes e.g ‘bouket’ for bouquet
Surface dysgraphia
Phonological dysgraphia
=> non-lexical route (sublexical) / phonological route is impaired
Dyslexia and dysgraphia often co-occur but some patients have greater
difficulties with reading than writing or vice versa (link with motor skills in
writing, link with visual skills in reading)
Lecture 8 Morphosyntax
Examples of structures:
• Clause level (main/subordinate clause)
• Phrase level
▫ Noun phrase (NP)
▫ Verb phrase (VP)
▫ Adjective phrase (Adj P)
▫ Adverb phrase (Adv P)
▫ Prepositional phrase (PP)
Examples of functions:
• Subject
• Object
• Verb
• Complement
Morphosyntax: structure-function relations
Lexicosemantics: structure-meaning relations
Prosody (stress, intonation, rhythm, word duration, pauses) => help resolve
ambiguity on syntactic level
Advantages:
- Immediate integration into parsing
- Pauses at phrase boundaries have more influence than other prosodic
cues
- Primarily during speech comprehension, but also during reading (‘inner
voice’) pauses > commas
- Evidence of EEG/ERPs > implicit prosody hypothesis
Garden-path model
− This model has primarily been tested through the study of eye
movements during sentence reading (eye-tracking)
− Also been tested through the neurolinguistic approach
E.g. Minimal attachment => ‘The girl knew the answer by heart’
NOT ‘The girl knew the answer was wrong’
E.g. Late closure => ‘Since Jay always jogs a mile it seems like a short distance
to him’
NOT ‘Since jay always jogs a mile seems like a short distance to him’
Constraint-based model
1. Sentence parsing relies on various sources of information (syntactic,
semantic, world knowledge), imposing constraints on the possible
interpretations of a sentence. >< garden-path
2. Different syntactic constructions are simultaneously activated (in
parallel) >< garden-path
3. The syntactic structure most frequently associated with a particular
verb is more strongly activated (verb bias). ><garden-path
4. Syntactic structures that were recently activated are more likely to be
reactivated (parsing flexibility). >< garden-path
E.g. Different syntactic constructions simultaneously:
Because it was John that Ralph threatened the neighbour recorded their
conversation
> subject analysis of ‘neighbour’
Because it was John that Ralph threatened the neighbour recorded their
conversation
> Same analysis: (1) easier than (2) -> (1) Main verb; (2) verb in (relative)
subordinate clause
But if recently exposed to (2), then switch to (2) rather than (1) > flexibility of
parsing >< garden-path.
Limitations:
Lecture 9
This model suggests that this selection is no based strictly on syntactic grounds
(><garden-path model) but on basis of all available info (similar w constraint-
based model)
Strength
“The second wife will claim the entire family inheritance for herself.”
3 models make diff predictions about the reading speed of this sentence:
Good-enough representations
All previous models assume that processes of sentence parsing always occur in
sentence comprehension. But there are conceivable reasons why this is not
the case:
1. There are differences among individuals regarding
grammatical knowledge. These differences are
associated with IQ, education, linguistic prof.
2. Parsing requires a lot of cognitive effort
Strengths:
Limitations:
1. Unclear rules are involved in the heuristic route
2. heuristic route can comprise limited processing as well as top-down
processing (considered more difficult)
3. reanalysis (algorithmic route) does not always yield better results (cf.
unrestricted race model)
(4) misinterpretation can occur after correct syntactic analysis (cf. because of
poor integration syntax and semantics, the mouse was eaten by the cheese)
Detection
Input=> attention => intake => internal system => output
Learning intentions/goals
Learning context
o Task demands
o Teacher instruction
Salience: the extent to which a feature stands out from its environment
Noticing Hypothesis
Attention & awareness necessary to language acquisition
Noticing: state lying between attention & awareness
Universal Grammar
Awareness of not only input but also what is missing from output
“noticing the gap”
Implicit = unconscious