请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 psycholinguistics
释义

psycholinguistics


psy·cho·lin·guis·tics

P0635300 (sī′kō-lĭng-gwĭs′tĭks)n. (used with a sing. verb) The study of the influence of psychological factors on the development, use, and interpretation of language.
psy′cho·lin′guist n.psy′cho·lin·guis′tic adj.

psycholinguistics

(ˌsaɪkəʊlɪŋˈɡwɪstɪks) n1. (Linguistics) (functioning as singular) the psychology of language, including language acquisition by children, the mental processes underlying adult comprehension and production of speech, language disorders, etc2. (Psychology) (functioning as singular) the psychology of language, including language acquisition by children, the mental processes underlying adult comprehension and production of speech, language disorders, etc ˌpsychoˈlinguist n ˌpsycholinˈguistic adj

psy•cho•lin•guis•tics

(ˌsaɪ koʊ lɪŋˈgwɪs tɪks)

n. (used with a sing. v.) the study of the relationship between language and the cognitive or behavioral characteristics of those who use it. [1935–40] psy`cho•lin′guist, n. psy`cho•lin•guis′tic, adj.

psycholinguistics

the study of the relationships between language and the behavioral mechanisms of its users, especially in language learning by children. — psycholinguist, n. — psycholinguistic, adj.See also: Linguistics
Thesaurus
Noun1.psycholinguistics - the branch of cognitive psychology that studies the psychological basis of linguistic competence and performancecognitive psychology - an approach to psychology that emphasizes internal mental processes
Translations

psycholinguistics


psycholinguistics,

the study of psychological states and mental activity associated with the use of language. An important focus of psycholinguistics is the largely unconscious application of grammatical rules that enable people to produce and comprehend intelligible sentences. Psycholinguists investigate the relationship between language and thought, a perennial subject of debate being whether language is a function of thinking or thought a function of the use of language. However, most problems in psycholinguistics are more concrete, involving the study of linguistic performance and language acquisitionlanguage acquisition,
the process of learning a native or a second language. The acquisition of native languages is studied primarily by developmental psychologists and psycholinguists.
..... Click the link for more information.
, especially in children. The work of Noam ChomskyChomsky, Noam
, 1928–, educator and linguist, b. Philadelphia. Chomsky, who has taught at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology since 1955, developed a theory of transformational (sometimes called generative or transformational-generative) grammar that revolutionized
..... Click the link for more information.
 and other proponents of transformational grammar have had a marked influence on the field. Neurolinguists study the brain activity involved in language use, obtaining much of their data from people whose ability to use language has been impaired due to brain damage.

Bibliography

See D. Foss and D. Hakes, Psycholinguistics (1978); V. C. Tartter, Language Processes (1986); A. Radford, Syntactic Theory and the Acquisition of English Syntax (1990).

Psycholinguistics

An area of study which draws from linguistics and psychology and focuses upon the comprehension and production of language. Although psychologists have long been interested in language, and the field of linguistics is an older science than psychology, scientists in the two fields have had little contact until the work of Noam Chomsky was published in the late 1950s. Chomsky's writing had the effect of making psychologists acutely aware of their lack of knowledge about the structure of language, and the futility of focusing attention exclusively upon the surface structure of language. As a result, psycholinguists, who have a background of training in both linguistics and psychology, have been attempting since the early 1960s to gain a better understanding of how the abstract rules which determine human language are acquired and used to communicate appropriately created meaningful messages from one person to another via the vocal-auditory medium. Research has been directed to the evolutionary development of language, the biological bases of language, the nature of the sound system, the rules of syntax, the nature of meaning, and the process of language acquisition.

psycholinguistics

the study of linguistic behaviour, including language acquisition, grammar, and the relationship between language and thought. CHOMSKY is one of the crucial figures in this area, but see also SAPIR-WHORF HYPOTHESIS. See also LINGUISTICS, SOCIOLINGUISTICS.

Psycholinguistics

 

the study of the rules by which speech utterances are generated and perceived. Psycholinguis-tics arose in the 1950’s in response to the emergence of practical problems that the apparatus of linguistics and traditional psychology proved inadequate to solve. These problems included the influencing of society through speech, issues in engineering psychology, and problems brought on by the intensified study of foreign languages.

In the USSR, psycholinguistics emerged in the 1960’s on the basis of L. S. Vygotskii’s Soviet school of psychology and linguistic traditions going back to L. V. Shcherba. Soviet psycholinguistics (sometimes called the theory of speech activity) regards speech as a form of purposeful human behavior, subject to the general laws of the organization of activity. Research has proceeded in a number of basic directions. Models of the grammatical generation of utterances have been studied by A. A. Leont’ev, T. V. Riabova, I. A. Zimniaia, and E. M. Vereshchagin. The mechanisms of perception and comprehension of the semantic aspects of speech and the laws of the semantic organization of human linguistic capability in general have been researched by A. A. Brudnyi and A. P. Klimenko. R. M. Frumkina and others have examined probability organization in the perception of speech. Intensive study is being devoted to the psychology of communication and the laws by which integral and connected texts are constructed. The main spheres of practical application are in foreign language study, engineering and space psychology, the study of children’s speech, and the study of the way speech influences people (radio, oratory, and so on).

Several trends are found in psycholinguistic study abroad. The neobehaviorist school is led in the USA by C. Osgood. There is a school based on N. Chomsky’s theory of generative grammars and headed by the American psychologist G. Miller. A third trend, an offshoot of the last-named, seeks to synthesize the achievements of Millerian psycholinguistics and those of classical European psychology; representatives include R. Rommetveit (Norway), G. Flores d’Arcais (Italy), W. Levelt (Netherlands), and J. Morton (England). Psycholinguistics is also rapidly developing in Canada, the Federal Republic of Germany, Austria, and Japan. Scholars in the German Democratic Republic, Rumania (T. Slama-Kazacu), Czechoslovakia, and other socialist countries hold views similar in many ways to those of Soviet psycholinguists.

REFERENCES

Miller, G., E. Galanter, and K. Pribram. Plany i struktura povedeniia. Moscow, 1965. (Translated from English.)
Leont’ev, A. A. Psikholingvistika. Leningrad, 1967.
Rechevoe vozdeistvie. Moscow, 1972.
Psikholingvistika za rubezhom. Moscow, 1972.
Osnovy teorii rechevoi deiatel’nosti. Moscow, 1974.
Psycholinguistics, 3rd ed. Bloomington, Ind.-London, 1967.
Slama-Cazacu, T. Introducere in psiholingvistică. Bucharest, 1968. Slama-Cazacu, T. La Psycholinguistique. Paris, 1972.
Advances in Psycholinguistics. Amsterdam-London, 1970.
Hörmann, H. Psycholinguistics. Berlin, 1971.
Slobin, D. Psycholinguistics. Glenview, III.-London, 1971.
Průcha, J. Soviet Psycholinguistics. The Hague-Paris, 1972.

A. A. LEONTEV

psycholinguistics


psycholinguistics

 [si″ko-ling-gwis´tiks] the study of psychological factors involved in the development and use of language.

psy·cho·lin·guis·tics

(sī'kō-ling-gwis'tiks), Study of a host of psychological factors associated with speech, including voice, attitudes, emotions, and grammatical rules, that affect communication and understanding of language. [psycho- + L. lingua, tongue]

psycholinguistics

(sī′kō-lĭng-gwĭs′tĭks)n. (used with a sing. verb) The study of the influence of psychological factors on the development, use, and interpretation of language.
psy′cho·lin′guist n.psy′cho·lin·guis′tic adj.

psycholinguistics

Psychology The study of factors affecting activities of communicating and understanding verbal information; the study of the manner in which language is acquired, stored, integrated and retrieved. See Kinesics, Language.

psy·cho·lin·guis·tics

(sī'kō-ling-gwis'tiks) Study of a host of psychological factors associated with speech, including voice, attitudes, emotions, and grammatical rules, which affect communication and understanding of language. [psycho- + L. lingua, tongue]

psy·cho·lin·guis·tics

(sī'kō-ling-gwis'tiks) Study of psychological factors associated with speech, including voice, attitudes, emotions, and grammatical rules. [psycho- + L. lingua, tongue]

psycholinguistics


Related to psycholinguistics: sociolinguistics, neurolinguistics
  • noun

Words related to psycholinguistics

noun the branch of cognitive psychology that studies the psychological basis of linguistic competence and performance

Related Words

  • cognitive psychology
随便看

 

英语词典包含2567994条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2024/12/22 20:30:09