Psycholinguistics: Crash Course Linguistics #11 - Free Educational videos for Students in K-12 | Lumos Learning

Psycholinguistics: Crash Course Linguistics #11 - Free Educational videos for Students in k-12


Psycholinguistics: Crash Course Linguistics #11 - By CrashCourse



Transcript
00:0-1 Hi , I'm taylor and welcome to crash course linguistics
00:02 . Language happens thanks to the brain . This spongy
00:05 thing sitting in our skulls is responsible for our abilities
00:08 to acquire complex linguistic skills like phrenology , semantics ,
00:11 syntax and reading . It's what helps us great poems
00:14 and composed texts or get the meaning of a raised
00:17 eyebrow . Our string of random emojis understanding the brain
00:20 helps us understand how languages produced and interpreted . We
00:24 can point directly to the parts of our mouths and
00:26 hands that are used to make language but you can't
00:29 reach in and feel your own brain . Luckily over
00:31 the years , people have devised a whole range of
00:34 ways of looking at the brain to figure out where
00:36 and how language happens . This is the field of
00:40 psycho linguistics . Mm Interest in the relationship between language
00:54 and the brain really picked up in the 19th century
00:57 . Researchers observed people with language disorders and then looked
01:00 at their brains after they died . If damage to
01:02 one part of the brain from a stroke , dementia
01:05 or a head injury correlated with a difference in the
01:07 subject's ability to understand or produce language , the scientists
01:11 could predict that there was a relationship there . These
01:13 kinds of injuries that affect our language abilities are known
01:16 as F . Asia , to famous kinds of aphasia
01:18 discovered at the time are called Broca's aphasia , and
01:21 veronica's aphasia , the areas of the brain related to
01:24 each kind of aphasia therefore became known as Broca's area
01:28 and veronica's area . You may have heard about them
01:30 in a psychology or anatomy class , Broca's area is
01:33 located around your left temple and it was named after
01:36 Paul Broca , 1/19 century physician who noticed that people
01:40 who had been injured in this part of their brain
01:42 acted in similar ways well , they could still understand
01:45 language . They could only produce maybe a handful of
01:48 words one at a time , Broca's area affected their
01:51 ability to speak or sign in a fluid grammatical way
01:55 . In other words , it affected their ability to
01:57 use more fa syntax . Right around the time Broca
02:00 was making his discovery , german physician Carl veronica discovered
02:04 that if a different part of the brain was injured
02:06 , there was a totally different effects . People injured
02:09 in this spot located just above your left ear ,
02:12 tended to talk in a way that sounded fluent and
02:14 grammatical but was nonsensical verticals area is associated with the
02:19 meaning of language , but those 19th century studies were
02:22 limited and the brain is amazingly complex and flexible .
02:26 More recent research has found that some people can majorly
02:29 damaged Broca's area and never developed aphasia . Other people
02:33 can relearn how to speak through extensive practice , building
02:36 on their ability to sing , which is controlled by
02:39 a different part of the brain . These newer studies
02:41 help us understand neural plasticity , the ability of the
02:45 brain to flexibly build and connect parts of the brain
02:48 in response to injury or as part of learning .
02:50 And though the language areas are usually located on the
02:52 left hemisphere of the brain , some people's language areas
02:55 are found predominantly in the right hemisphere or spread across
02:58 both sides , especially for left handed or ambidextrous people
03:01 . So the relationship between language and the brain is
03:04 even more complicated than we first thought . Even now
03:06 , errors and differences and language use can teach us
03:09 about the different skills involved in language and how they're
03:12 organized inside our minds . We all sometimes forget a
03:15 word that we know perfectly well or accidentally swap words
03:18 , parts of words or idioms what you might encounter
03:21 a spoon , Tourism's tip of the tongue experiences or
03:23 mixed metaphors . These production errors tell us valuable things
03:27 about how the mind handles language like you know ,
03:29 when you just can't quite remember a word , you
03:32 know it , you almost have it , it's right
03:34 there , you just can't retrieve it . This phenomenon
03:38 is known as a tip of the tongue experience .
03:40 And psycho linguists have found that people with a word
03:43 on the tips of their tongues can often recall other
03:45 information about it . They might remember its meaning ,
03:48 its first letter and sometimes how many syllables it has
03:51 , but they can't quite recall the complete word signed
03:54 languages also have this phenomenon which is known as the
03:56 tip of the fingers naturally . And signers experiencing tip
04:00 of the fingers can also recall certain information about the
04:03 sign they're seeking , especially the initial hand shape and
04:06 location of the hand . They just can't recall a
04:08 movement . They need to complete the sign tip of
04:10 the tongue . And finger experiences can show us how
04:13 our thoughts are organized because we can have access to
04:15 the first letter or initial hand position without having access
04:19 to the remaining sounds or movement . Knowing a word
04:21 isn't a binary state of yes or no . Like
04:24 a computer . Our brains can also retain partial information
04:28 . Production errors are so useful that psycho linguists have
04:31 techniques for trying to get people to make even more
04:33 of them so that they can study those errors .
04:35 In a laboratory setting , psycho linguists can induce tip
04:38 of the tongue or finger experiences by asking people to
04:42 translate words or recall proper . Now , let's head
04:44 to the thought bubble to try another psycho linguistic experiment
04:47 . Right here in a moment to shapes are going
04:50 to appear on the screen . Let's decide which one
04:53 is called kiki and which one is called bouba .
04:56 Are you ready ? It's more than likely you called
05:00 the shape on the left cuba and the shape on
05:02 the right kiki . About nine out of every 10
05:04 people make that choice . Experiments have repeatedly shown that
05:07 we think of voiceless stops like and high vowels E
05:12 as small , sharp , crunchy , bright and spiky
05:16 compared to voice sounds like buddha and rounded vowels like
05:19 Ooh , which are big , lumpy , dark and
05:22 heavy across many different languages . The kiki buba experiment
05:26 shows us that language is related to other sensory experiences
05:29 . Yes . Words are still made up of arbitrary
05:32 smaller parts but it's not completely 100% arbitrary . And
05:36 this mapping between senses can show up in some general
05:39 tendencies for naming things across language . One large study
05:42 showed that words for knows were more likely to have
05:45 a nasal sound like mama orna . Across many different
05:48 languages , marketers are very aware of these links .
05:51 Buba wouldn't make a good name for a brand of
05:53 crackers , but kiki would because we generally want our
05:57 crackers to be crispy . But I'm sure Buba brand
05:59 ice cream would taste much better round and smooth and
06:02 creamy despite these general tendencies . There are also language
06:06 specific differences . If your language doesn't have a book
06:09 or you sound , you might not think of buba
06:12 as a possible word so you might not associated consistently
06:15 with the blobby shape . Different languages can also label
06:18 the shapes differently depending on how their sound systems work
06:21 . Town can influence how mandarin speakers label these shapes
06:23 . The human brain doesn't completely separate our linguistic knowledge
06:26 from other knowledge of the world . And experiments like
06:29 the kiki bouba . Test . Help show that .
06:31 Thanks . Thought bubble or should I say thought buba
06:34 . That's one kind of psycho linguistic experiment . But
06:36 it's far from the only one psycho linguists might use
06:39 a prime ng experiment to test how closely words are
06:42 related in the brain . They prime the participant with
06:45 one word and measure the speed of their responses to
06:47 other words . Say a subject is primed with the
06:50 word dog and then has a faster response to cat
06:52 than to other words . We might conclude cat and
06:55 dog are more closely related in the brain . We
06:57 can also use gating experiments where we measure how much
07:00 of a word a participant needs to hear or see
07:03 until they know I'm saying park instead of parked gating
07:06 experiments show that sounds aren't always produced in discrete sequences
07:10 , like our alphabet , makes them look like most
07:12 english speakers will produce the co sound in cuba a
07:15 little bit differently than the coast sound . In calm
07:18 psycho linguists have even looked into such mysteries as weather
07:21 , swearing helps us manage pain in that study psycho
07:24 linguists compared how long people could hold their hand in
07:27 a bucket of ice water when they were allowed to
07:29 swear and when they were not , when people were
07:32 allowed to swear , they could hold their hand in
07:34 the ice water for longer . Mm I'm definitely going
07:37 to find a practical application for this . Other ways
07:40 of figuring out what's going on in the brain when
07:41 we use language , involve using various kinds of equipment
07:44 . Eye tracking studies , try to figure out what
07:46 we're thinking about based on what we're looking at .
07:48 Let's say we're reading a sentence like this one .
07:51 Now the rabbit crouched on the cushion is a totally
07:54 reasonable english sentence . So that's where most people assume
07:57 it's going at first . But then when we get
07:59 to the words seemed we need to reevaluate . That's
08:02 where I tracking shows that a lot of people look
08:04 back at the earlier portion of the sentence to figure
08:06 out what's going on . In this case , a
08:08 structure more like the rabbit that was crouched on the
08:11 cushion , seemed friendly , misleading sentences like these are
08:15 called garden path sentences because they seem to lead you
08:18 up the garden path of one interpretation before you realize
08:21 there's actually a different structure going on . Eye tracking
08:24 and garden path sentences show us that we process sentences
08:27 as we're experiencing them . We don't wait until we've
08:30 seen or heard a whole sentence before starting to figure
08:32 out what's going on , electroencephalogram fee or E .
08:36 G . Records the electrical activity of neurons firing through
08:39 a cap of small sensors on the scalp . A
08:41 psycho linguists might hook a person out to an E
08:43 . G . And say a sentence like my favorite
08:46 ice cream is chocolate and socks , socks is semantically
08:49 unexpected in a sentence that we assumed would be about
08:52 food so the brain reacts accordingly . And an E
08:55 E . G . Is especially good at indicating when
08:57 a surgeon electricity happens . So here it might map
09:00 a kind of surge known as an N 400 around
09:03 400 milliseconds . After hearing socks , eggs are quiet
09:07 and relatively affordable , but they can be disturbed even
09:10 by small things like blinking . Plus they're not that
09:14 great at mapping where things happen in the brain ,
09:16 functional magnetic resonance imaging or FmRI , on the other
09:19 hand , is relatively precise in locating brain activity getting
09:23 within a few millimeters of where the activity is happening
09:26 . It does this by measuring when there's increased oxygen
09:29 in parts of the brain . The more neural activity
09:31 you're thinking , the more blood goes to the area
09:33 of the brain and that blood brings a lot of
09:36 oxygen to help those busy neurons . For example a
09:38 psycho linguists might have someone learn and recite back a
09:41 few words in a made up language to see what
09:44 happens in the brain . When we try to learn
09:45 a new language . While Fmri is relatively precise in
09:48 locating brain activity , it's less precise at when that
09:52 activity is happening , it only gets within a few
09:54 seconds while thoughts can happen in fractions of a second
09:58 . They're also very expensive and pretty dang uncomfortable to
10:01 hang out in . So there's sort of a trade
10:03 off . E . G machines are precise about time
10:05 but imprecise about space whereas MRI machines are precise about
10:09 space but imprecise about time . These machines with their
10:12 precise data and complex graphs might seem like just the
10:15 thing 19th century researchers like broken and veronica needed to
10:19 understand the link between the brain and language but really
10:22 we need to approach them with just as much caution
10:24 as those older experiments . There's still a lot of
10:27 individual variation and how our brains get organized as we
10:30 learn things and lots of psycho linguistics work has been
10:34 done with small numbers of people who speak dominant languages
10:37 like english . So we only know a little about
10:39 if and how being fluent in other languages affects what
10:43 happens in the brain . There's always more to learn
10:46 . See you next time when we talk about how
10:47 we learn language in the first place . Thanks for
10:49 watching this episode of crush chris linguistics . If you
10:52 want to help keep all crash course free for everybody
10:55 forever , you can join our community on Patreon .
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