What it takes to talk exploring developmental cognitive linguistics

This book puts cognition back at the heart of the language learning process and challenges the idea that language acquisition can be meaningfully understood as a purely linguistic phenomenon. For each domain-general capacity placed under the spotlight - memory, attention, inhibition, categorisation,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ibbotson, Paul
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Berlin ; Boston Walter de Gruyter, [2020]
Series:Cognitive linguistics research ; 64.
Subjects:
Online Access:EBSCOhost
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Description
Summary:This book puts cognition back at the heart of the language learning process and challenges the idea that language acquisition can be meaningfully understood as a purely linguistic phenomenon. For each domain-general capacity placed under the spotlight - memory, attention, inhibition, categorisation, analogy and social-cognition - we establish the extent to which they shape the acquisition of sounds, words and grammar. As a cultural tool, linguistic knowledge has to pass through the bottleneck of what cognition can do, and allow, at any stage in development, and these self-imposed constraints can be adaptive for learning because they massively dampen the degrees of freedom available for linguistic generalizations. Without a developmental perspective it is difficult to make sense of what kind of thing language is, because learning constrains and shapes what kind of thing language can be. Language is special not because of some encapsulated module with content impenetrable and hived-off from the rest of cognition. It is special because of the forms it can take rather than the parts it is made of and because it could be nature?s finest example of cognitive recycling and reuse.
Physical Description:1 online resource (x, 224 pages) illustrations (some color).
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:9783110647914
3110647915
9783110644500
3110644509