The CEU Department of Cognitive Science cordially invites you to the following talk by:
Jesse
Snedeker,<https://psychology.fas.harvard.edu/people/jesse-snedeker> Harvard
University
Date: Tuesday, July 4, 2023 (note the unusual day please)
Time: 3:30 pm (to 5:00 pm) CET (note the unusual time please)
Venue: D002- (QS Vienna) and Zoom
https://ceu-edu.zoom.us/j/94044877942?pwd=clBVdjk5YUlBeE1Ua3RGdTU3TWpJZz09&…
Meeting ID: 940 4487 7942
Passcode: 393993
Chair: Eva Wittenberg
Title: Who did what to whom? Marking event participants in Emerging Languages
A central question in the study of any language is how it marks the role that each
argument is playing in an event. A central question in linguistic typology is why some
patterns of marking are more common than others. And central questions in language
development are how these patterns are acquired, what they tell us about pre-linguistic
conceptual structures and the degree to which the acquisition process shapes typology.
Historically, two strong hypotheses have bridged typology and acquisition. The word-order
hypothesis proposes that order is a cognitively salient cue, which is available to
children before linguistic cues (like case or verbal agreement) and thus appears early in
the emergence of a new language, though it may decline in importance over historical
evolution as new devices are created. The agent-first hypothesis proposes that agents
have a privileged role in event representations-either because they move first or because
they are conceptually salient. This leads children to expect them to appear first in the
sentence, resulting in a strong bias for agent-first word order in emerging languages,
which persists in most languages with a preferred word order.
Both hypotheses make strong predictions for emerging languages. While spoken language
creoles conform to these predictions, this could simply reflect the word-order
regularities inherited from the contact languages. Work on emerging sign languages offers
a more mixed picture. ABSL and KQSL are typically described as SOV languages but have
more variable word order when the patient is human. Studies of NSL have reached varying
conclusions, in part because the stimuli that were used only rarely resulted in the
production of both the agent and patient.
In this talk, I'll present three lines of work bearing on these hypotheses: a
published study on gestural language creation, some new data on transitive constructions
in several dialects of Chinese Sign Language (lead by Hao Lin) and ongoing work on
Nicaraguan Sign Language (lead by Annemarie Kocab).
The results of all three programs undermine the word-order and agent-first hypotheses (at
least in their simplest form). The findings however, strongly suggest that concepts like
agent and patient guide the emergence of language. Our ongoing work explores this
possibility more systematically.
*Anyone not affiliated with CEU wishing to attend in-person in Vienna must RSVP
here<https://forms.office.com/pages/responsepage.aspx?id=E1nE2VN24kuSC72…
to get access to the lecture hall.
Let Eva know, please, if you would like to schedule a meeting with the speaker.
Thank you very much,
Reka
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