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11 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
Phonologically consistent forms (PCFs)
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Ferguson, 9 months, not actual words but consistently used to point out something ("DD!")
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Halliday and protolanguage
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looked at son's phonological forms and gestures and noticed you could tell what he was trying to communicate through this. Protolanguage means before language
"Wee!" while pushing something away |
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first words arise between what ages
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11-14 months
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Who studied the classification of vocal utterances based on interpretation of gestures?
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Carter, builds on Halliday in more depth, looks more at gestures
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At what age can words be used to name or label something
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12-13 months
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What did Bates and Virginia Belterre notice about prelinguistic/prerecognizable and gestures?
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children with autism cannot perform these gestures to communicate as well as others, gestures were typically preceding word use
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What were some of the ritual request gestures Bates and Belterre noticed in their studies?
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if wanted to be picked up --> extension of arms
showing/giving back communicative pointing responding to name |
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Bonvillian: Does this happen earlier in children with deaf parents?
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pretty much occurs at the same time, but most accelerated were hearing children of one or two deaf parents
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What two things were picked up about child language in diary studies from the 19th and 20th centuries?
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Overextension: children calling all quadrupeds "doggie"
Under-generalization: children calling only the family dog "doggie" |
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Between what ages is overextension mostly used?
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13-30 months
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What is overextension usually based on? what is it not? Eve V. Clark
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Overextension is usually based on SHAPE, semantic features
not based on sound, size, movement, color |