认知与音系学

R. Schwartz, P. Prelock
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引用次数: 4

摘要

儿童的言语行为传统上被认为与交际行为的其他方面是分开的。在某种程度上,这可能是使用术语articulation来描述这种行为的结果。这个术语反映了这样一种观点,即这种行为只涉及获得产生语音的运动能力和感知能力,以区分和感知这些产品的声学后果。然而,这种观点忽略了语音行为的一个主要方面。运动和感知能力当然是重要的组成部分,在语言的其他领域,还有更高层次的表征和组织能力。第一次尝试清楚地描述这些组成部分是生成音位学家的建议,他们提出了语音行为的两个基本层面,语音和语音(乔姆斯基和哈雷,1968)。语音层面涉及语音序列的实际产生的一些表示。另外,语音层面涉及到这些序列的一些更抽象的表示,以及各种类型的规则,这些规则规定了这些表示之间的关系,并将它们转化为语音层面的实现。这一观点与有关语言其他方面的一般性质以及涉及表征的非语言行为的建议有许多相似之处。我们的立场是,这些相似之处表明了语音行为的各个方面、语言行为的其他方面以及涉及表征的其他行为的各个方面之间的关系。本文的重点将放在这些关系的证据以及它们的临床和理论意义上。皮亚杰(1962)将语言描述为符号学或符号功能发展的几个结果之一,其他结果是符号游戏、意象和延迟模仿。更一般地说,这种发展涉及到构建心理表征和执行心理操作的能力的获得。与此相关的,以一种间接的方式,是儿童在社会认知领域的发展,这在儿童早期涉及到自我中心主义的消失。对皮亚杰理论重新燃起的兴趣导致了对各种关系的一系列研究
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Cognition and Phonology
Children's speech-sound behavior has traditionally been treated as separate from other aspects of communicative behavior. In part this may have been the result of the use of the term articulation to describe this behavior. This term reflects the view that such behavior involves exclusively the acqusition of the motor ability to produce speech sounds and the perceptual ability to discriminate and perceive the acoustic consequences of these productions. However, this view overlooks a major facet of speech-sound behavior. Motor and perceptual abilities are certainly important components, along with higher level representational and organizational components as in other domains of language. The first attempts to delineate these components clearly were the proposals of generative phonologists who posited two basic levels of speech-sound behavior, phonetic and phonological (Chomsky and Halle, 1968). The phonetic level involves some representation of the actual production of speech-sound sequences. Alternately, the phonological level involves some more abstract representation of these sequences along with various types of rules which specify relationships among these representations and transform them into phonetic level realizations. This viewpoint involves a number of parallels with proposals concerning the general nature of other aspects of language as well as with nonlinguistic behaviors involving representation. Our position is that these parallels are indicative of relationships among aspects of speech-sound behavior, other aspects of language behavior, and aspects of other behaviors involving representation. The focus of this paper will be upon evidence for these relationships as well as their clinical and theoretical implications. Piaget (1962) described language as one of several outcomes of the development of the semiotic or symbolic function, the other outcomes being symbolic play, imagery and deferred imitation. More generally, this development involves the attainment of the ability to construct mental representations and perform mental operations. Related, in a somewhat tangential way, is the development of the child in the area of social cognition which early in childhood involves the disappearance of egocentricism. A renewed interest in Piaget's theory has led to a flurry of investigations of the relationships among vari-
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