Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Psychology, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.
Wiley Interdiscip Rev Cogn Sci. 2020 Jan;11(1):e1515. doi: 10.1002/wcs.1515. Epub 2019 Aug 27.
Developmental sociolinguistics is a rapidly evolving interdisciplinary framework that builds upon theoretical and methodological contributions from multiple disciplines (i.e., sociolinguistics, language acquisition, the speech sciences, developmental psychology, and psycholinguistics). A core assumption of this framework is that language is by its very nature variable, and that much of this variability is informative, as it is (probabilistically) governed by a variety of factors-including linguistic context, social or cultural context, the relationship between speaker and addressee, a language user's geographic origin, and a language user's gender identity. It is becoming increasingly clear that consideration of these factors is absolutely essential to developing realistic and ecologically valid models of language development. Given the central importance of language in our social world, a more complete understanding of early social development will also require a deeper understanding of when and how language variation influences children's social inferences and behavior. As the cross-pollination between formerly disparate fields continues, we anticipate a paradigm shift in the way many language researchers conceptualize the challenge of early acquisition. This article is categorized under: Linguistics > Linguistic Theory Linguistics > Language Acquisition Neuroscience > Development Psychology > Language.
发展社会语言学是一个快速发展的跨学科框架,它建立在多个学科(即社会语言学、语言习得、言语科学、发展心理学和心理语言学)的理论和方法贡献之上。该框架的一个核心假设是,语言本质上是可变的,而且这种可变性在很大程度上是有信息的,因为它(概率上)受到多种因素的制约,包括语言语境、社会或文化语境、说话者和听话者之间的关系、语言使用者的地理起源以及语言使用者的性别认同。越来越明显的是,考虑这些因素对于开发现实和生态有效的语言发展模型是绝对必要的。鉴于语言在我们的社会世界中的核心重要性,要更全面地了解早期社会发展,还需要更深入地了解语言变化何时以及如何影响儿童的社会推理和行为。随着曾经不同领域的交叉授粉继续进行,我们预计许多语言研究人员在概念化早期习得的挑战时将发生范式转变。本文归类于: 语言学 > 语言理论 语言学 > 语言习得 神经科学 > 发展心理学 > 语言