Language/culture/mind/brain: Progress at the margins between disciplines

Patricia K. Kuhl*, Feng Ming Tsao, Huei Mei Liu, Yang Zhang, Bart De Boer

*此作品的通信作者

研究成果: 雜誌貢獻期刊論文同行評審

44 引文 斯高帕斯(Scopus)

摘要

At the forefront of research on language are new data demonstrating infants' strategies in the early acquisition of language. The data show that infants perceptually "map" critical aspects of ambient language in the first year of life before they can speak. Statistical and abstract properties of speech are picked up through exposure to ambient language. Moreover, linguistic experience alters infants' perception of speech, warping perception in a way that enhances native-language speech processing. Infants' strategies are unexpected and unpredicted by historical views. At the same time, research in three additional disciplines is contributing to our understanding of language and its acquisition by children. Cultural anthropologists are demonstrating the universality of adult speech behavior when addressing infants and children across cultures, and this is creating a new view of the role adult speakers play in bringing about language in the child. Neuroscientists, using the techniques of modern brain imaging, are revealing the temporal and structural aspects of language processing by the brain and suggesting new views of the critical period for language. Computer scientists, modeling the computational aspects of childrens' language acquisition, are meeting success using biologically inspired neural networks. Although a consilient view cannot yet be offered, the crossdisciplinary interaction now seen among scientists pursuing one of humans' greatest achievements, language, is quite promising.

原文英語
頁(從 - 到)136-174
頁數39
期刊Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
935
DOIs
出版狀態已發佈 - 2001
對外發佈

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • 一般神經科學
  • 一般生物化學,遺傳學和分子生物學
  • 科學史與哲學

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