Carrigan Emily M, Coppola Marie
University of Connecticut, United States.
University of Connecticut, United States.
Cognition. 2017 Jan;158:10-27. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2016.09.012. Epub 2016 Oct 20.
Constructivist accounts of language acquisition maintain that the language learner aims to match a target provided by mature users. Communicative problem solving in the context of social interaction and matching a linguistic target or model are presented as primary mechanisms driving the language development process. However, research on the development of homesign gesture systems by deaf individuals who have no access to a linguistic model suggests that aspects of language can develop even when typical input is unavailable. In four studies, we examined the role of communication in the genesis of homesign systems by assessing how well homesigners' family members comprehend homesign productions. In Study 1, homesigners' mothers showed poorer comprehension of homesign descriptions produced by their now-adult deaf child than of spoken Spanish descriptions of the same events produced by one of their adult hearing children. Study 2 found that the younger a family member was when they first interacted with their deaf relative, the better they understood the homesigner. Despite this, no family member comprehended homesign productions at levels that would be expected if family members co-generated homesign systems with their deaf relative via communicative interactions. Study 3 found that mothers' poor or incomplete comprehension of homesign was not a result of incomplete homesign descriptions. In Study 4 we demonstrated that Deaf native users of American Sign Language, who had no previous experience with the homesigners or their homesign systems, nevertheless comprehended homesign productions out of context better than the homesigners' mothers. This suggests that homesign has comprehensible structure, to which mothers and other family members are not fully sensitive. Taken together, these studies show that communicative problem solving is not responsible for the development of structure in homesign systems. The role of this mechanism must therefore be re-evaluated in constructivist theories of language development.
建构主义的语言习得理论认为,语言学习者旨在匹配成熟使用者提供的目标。在社会互动背景下的交际问题解决以及与语言目标或模型的匹配被视为推动语言发展过程的主要机制。然而,对那些无法接触到语言模型的聋人所发展的家庭手语系统的研究表明,即使没有典型的输入,语言的某些方面也能得到发展。在四项研究中,我们通过评估家庭手语使用者的家庭成员对家庭手语表达的理解程度,来考察交际在家庭手语系统形成过程中的作用。在研究1中,与成年聋儿现在使用的家庭手语描述相比,家庭手语使用者的母亲对同一个成年听力正常孩子用西班牙语说出的相同事件的描述理解得更好。研究2发现,家庭成员首次与聋人亲属互动时年龄越小,他们对家庭手语使用者的理解就越好。尽管如此,没有一个家庭成员对家庭手语表达的理解程度能达到如果家庭成员通过交际互动与聋人亲属共同生成家庭手语系统时所预期的水平。研究3发现,母亲对家庭手语理解不佳或不完整并非家庭手语描述不完整所致。在研究4中,我们证明了之前没有接触过家庭手语使用者或其家庭手语系统的美国手语本土聋人使用者,在脱离语境的情况下对家庭手语表达的理解比家庭手语使用者的母亲更好。这表明家庭手语具有可理解的结构,而母亲和其他家庭成员对此并不完全敏感。综合来看,这些研究表明,交际问题解决并非家庭手语系统结构发展的原因。因此,在建构主义的语言发展理论中,必须重新评估这一机制的作用。