What is psycholinguistics
LENY SAILI RAHMAH, S.PD., M. HUM
Linguistics = the scientific study of language
Psychology = the scientific study of human
          behavior and cognition
         Definition of psycholingustics
Psycholinguistics is an interdiciplinary field of study in
which the goals are to understand how people acquire
language, how people use language to speak and
understand one another, and how language is
represented and processed in the brain.
  Language as a means of communication
Linguistics       Psycholinguistics
               Language
    Speaker
                Message           Listener
               Informatio
                   n
    Encodes                       Decodes
Linguistics
 Object: language          The structural
                           components of a
                              language
Psycholinguistics
 object: speech process
                            Language as a
                              process
                       Mind
Interpretatio                     Language
     n/                          acquisition
 processing
                                Language
           Language           comprehensio
          production               n
                        Scope
How language is acquired and produced by user
How brain works on language
Language acquisition
The difference between children language
 acquisition and language learning
Linguistic interference
Language development
The role of motivation in foreign language learning
           History of psycholinguistics
Aitchison (1990) asserts that the first known
 experiment in psycholinguistics was conducted by the
 German philosopher, Dietrich Tiedemann.
The first experimental record in psycholinguistics is
 nonetheless credited to the British psychologist Francis
 Galton (1822-1911)
Wilhem Wundt, published a book on language (Die
 Sprache) in 1900, covered a number of topics that are
 still very much relevant in current psycholinguistics,
 including child language acquisition, sign language,
 language perception, and grammatical structure
          History of Psycholinguistics
Noam Chomsky is the father of psycholinguistics
Chomsky’s influence on modern linguistics and
 psycholinguistics is profound, and his focus on
 competence (as opposed to performance) drew
 linguistics heavily in this direction
       Lingking language and the mind
Language
The inner process of the human mind
How does language relate the mind
                Human language
6 important characteristics of human language:
Displacement
Arbitrariness
Productivity
Cultural transmission
Discreteness
Duality
Displacement : the human language can refer to things in the past,
 the future and even places outside the particular physical context
Arbitrariness: this suggests that a reference and the linguistic
 element representing it have no actual iconic link.
Productivity: it is possible for new words to be formed in the
 course of time
Cultural transmission: language is a means of transmitting culture
 from one generation to another.
Discreteness: this distinctivenness is what helps to determine if a
 sound is actually a phoneme or not in a language
Duality: language normally has the physical and the meaning
 levels
      Inner Process of the Human Mind
Aitchison (1990) argues that the human mind is only
 reflected in term of thought made tangible by
 language
Steinberg, Nagata and Aline (2001) argue that the
 basic mental entities used by the child acquiring the
 language are actually derived from the physical world.
The processing of thoughts is what language reflects.
 It is thus normal for children learning or acquiring a
 language to process it within their cognitive and
 environmental experiences.
   How does language relate to the mind?
Vygotsky (1962) observes that the major function
 which language performs psychologically is to
 communicate one’s intension and help maintain
 social links. For one to convey what one has in mind,
 one has to do it through a language of some sorts.
Whorf (1956) argues that language absolutely
 controls one’s mindset and decides the way one uses
 language
The human mind connects itself to experiences and
 then transletes these into linguistic elements
    How does psycholinguistics relate to our lives?
Practical ways that psycholinguistcs relate to the
 human ways of life
Relate psycholinguistics to your personal linguistics
 experiences
Practical ways that psycholinguistcs relate to the human ways of life
It studies the way the human thinking process is closely
 connected to language
Grammatically is highly rooted in the ability of the speaker to
 control language usage
Psycholinguistics undoubtedly makes obvious, through such
 practical occurrences like slips of the tongue and the
 anticipation of the next phoneme in the course of discussing
Psycholinguistics also helps us to study how human beings
 comprehend language.
Our environment as input to the thought processes of human
 beings can also be seen as another thing that underlies the
 psycholinguistic study.