Intro Psycholinguistics
Intro Psycholinguistics
Psycholinguistics
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Chapter 1 (Introduction)
1.1 Introduction
Mental lexicon = dictionary in our heads
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Pre-verbal message
FORMULATION
(GRAMMATICAL and PHONOLOGICAL ENCODING) Grammar and lexicon
Producing structured language
External speech
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Function of pauses
o Planning
o Breaking utterances into constituent part, at places where a written text might have
punctuation = delimitative pauses
o Regulate their breathing = physiological pauses
o Gain time to search for a word
Read speech an unprepared speech difference in planning
o With a prepared text we need to plan when to pause in order to mark the structure
of the text. We also need to organize how we are going to articulate the speech
sounds that correspond to the word
o In spontaneous speech, we need to decide what we want to say and what sentences
and words we want to use
GRAMMATICAL ENCODING
Functional processing
(lexical selection, function assignment)
The Mental Lexicon
Positional processing
(constituent assembly’s: sentence frame, inflections) lemmas
lexemes
PHONOLOGICAL ENCODING
2.5 Formulation
Grammatical encoding = where the speaker uses their knowledge of grammar to create
sentence structures that will convey a message
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o Functional processing = give the appropriate jobs to words that will express the
speaker’s intended meaning
Lexical selection = choosing the words
Function assignment = giving words their jobs in the sentence
o Positional processing = selected set of lemmas organizes into an ordered string
Constituent assembly = creates a sentence frame for the message
Content words = nouns, verbs, adjectives and adverbs
Function words = prepositions, conjunctions, particles, etc.
o Phonetic plan = drive the articulators (the speech organs)
Phonological encoding = allows us to construct the appropriate sequences of sound to
express the message
Lemmas = semantic aspects of words, linked to lexemes (= forms of words, can be the spoken
shape or their written form)
Exchange = two words that have the same grammatical category but which appear in
different syntactic phrases
Stranding = element has not moved with the rest of the word
Syntactic priming = if participant read the prime sentence and have to describe a picture of a
man reading a story to a boy, then they are more likely to use a sentence like the man is
reading a story to the boy than the man is reading the boy a story. But if the prime has a
double-object construction (= sentence with two objects, one is the direct object en the
other indirect object) then participants are more likely to describe the same picture also with
a double-object
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In substitutions the intended concept activates its lemma and activation flows through the
associative links between lemmas so that an associate of the initially accessed lemma is also
activated and the wrong lexeme is inserted into the utterance
Blends and substitutions differ in the type of semantic relationships: synonyms are blendes,
substitutions involve antonyms or other types of associative relationship
Malapropisms = errors where the word produced is similar to the intended word in its sound
shape, but not necessarily in its meaning
There are links from the sounds in the target word to other words contain the same sounds
and as the form of the target is retrieved, this activates its compent sounds.
Serial search models = speaker has access to one word at a time following a rather discrete
and unidirectional flow of information between levels
Interactive activation models = information spreads by way of activation from units at one
level down to multiple units at the next level, but then also back up to the higher-level unit
Semantically = words share some aspect of their meanings
Phonologically = words share some aspect of their pronunciation
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4.2 Tip-of-the-tongue
Tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon = a gap that is intensely active,
Grammatical gender = nouns are either masculine or feminine
Participants in a TOT state could often successfully report the gender of the target
Anomia = experience similar to TOT of brain-damaged patients
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5.2 Self-monitoring
Repairs in response to external feedback, but also when not
Speakers carry out monitoring of their own speech
Aspect of speech that speaker monitor
o Check whether the message is the one that they want to utter
o Check that the words they have chose are the best ones for what they want to say
o Check that the correct grammatical structures are being use
o Monitor for errors in pronunciation
o Monitoring for contextual appropriateness
5.4 Repair
Typically involve the interruption of an erroneous utterance
3 phrases
o Interruption
Moment when speaker break off from their original utterance
o Editing
Editing expression = e.g. uh, that is, (or) rather, I mean
o Repair
Speak makes good the damage of error from the point of restart onward
Main interruption rule = speaker interrupt themselves immediately that they detect an error
Covert repairs = self-interruption before the speaker actually utters the incorrect part of their
utterance
Over repairs = error and repair are available for scrutiny
Functions of editing expression
o The speaker initiates a restart
o Continuation
o Form a grammatically complete coordinated structure
Prosodic marking = speakers emphasis of the repair word
An error in a word’s stress pattern is more likely to be repaired if the misplacement of stress
also result in a difference in the vowel oin the word
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The repair is a response to the realization that the output is not the word the speaker
intended
In cases where an error correcting is made, then it is equally fast regardless of whether the
error would have produced real words or nonwords
Speaker manage to filter out taboo words
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Iconic gestures typically precede the spoken material to which they are linked by about one
second
Iconic gestures are highly frequent during pauses in the fluent phases of speech cycles
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8.5 Selection
Deviation point = point in the nonsense word where it diverges from known words
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9.5 Dyslexia
Developmental dyslexica = no obvious single event that has resulted in the problems
faced by the dyslexic
Acquired dyslexia = usually the result of brain damage of from a stroke
Surface dyslexia = good reading aloud of nonsense words, poor recognition and reading
aloud of real words
Phonological dyslexia = good ability in reading real word but poor at reading
pronounceable nonwords
Nonsemantic reading = good reading aloud skill but don’t have any understanding of
what they read
Deep dyslexia = cannot read aloud nonsense form, often substitute visually similar real
words for nonsense forms, good reading comprehension for concrete and imaginable
word, but less with abstract and grammatical word, large number of substitution,
paralexia
o Paralexia = word that is semantically related to the target begin read out as
another semantic related word
Derivational paralexias = one affixed form is substituted for another
Visual paralexias = visual similarity between target and error
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Unrestricted accounts of processing claim that many or all types of information can be used
during processing
Weak interactive accounts = interaction between syntactic and other sources occurs only
when the syntactic analyses requires it
Strong interactive accounts = non-syntactic sources play a more determining role in sentence
analysis and are not subservient to a central syntactic processor
Constraint-based accounts = each of the various types of information available to a reader or
listener is used to determine the analysis of a sentence
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12.3 Inferences
Understanding more than the surface meaning of sentences
Listeners use very rapidly their understanding of the preceding discourse and inferences
based on this understanding to sort out which protagonists are likely to be the subject and
object of incomplete phrases
12.4 Anaphora
Important aspect of language comprehension is the making of connections between the
different parts of a discourse
Coherence = consistency between the events or states in series of sentence
Cohesion = making the appropriate links between the words and phrases in a text
Anaphora = second or subsequent mention of the object
Antecedent = refer to entities that are being introduced into the discourse for the first time
Bridging inferences = anaphor resolution requires some additional inferences to be made
The degree of specificity of the noun phrases involved can affect the processing of anaphoric
relations
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During fluent speech production speakers tend to line up their pauses with the boundaries
between phrases and clauses
Speaker frequently accompany their speech with iconic gestures that represent some salient
aspect of what is talking about
Anomia = difficult to give names from objects
Word deafness = patient can read, write and speak quite normally, but unable to understand
words spoken to them
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